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fMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

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Page 1: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

fMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and

Object Recognition

Culham et al. (submitted)

Page 2: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Overview

• Background

• Methods

• Results

• Conclusions

• Discussion– Contrasts & baselines

Page 3: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Background

• Visual systems

Page 4: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Dual Stream Theory

“ACTION” (grasping)

“PERCEPTION”

(1-back recognition)

Page 5: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

fMRI Studies

• LO = lateral occipital complex– Recognition area in ventral stream

• AIP = anterior intraparietal complex– Grasping area in dorsal stream

Page 6: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Methods

• Participants– N=7, age 23-33, R-handed, fMRI experienced

• Design– 1 scan session of grasping task– 1 scan session of recognition task

Page 7: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Grasping Task

Page 8: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Grasparatus

Page 9: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Recognition Task

• Intact Objects– Grayscale– Line Drawings– Familiar and Novel

• Scrambled

Page 10: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Event-Related fMRI

• Removed motion-related artifact

• Blocked response types– Grasp, Reach, (No response)

• ITI = 14 s

Page 11: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Imaging & Analyses

• 4-Tesla system, head coil

• 13 T*-2 slices every 2 s– Parallel to calcarine sulcus

• T1 structural images

• Cortical surface-based analysis

Page 12: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Results

1) Functionally define ROIs

2) Reverse comparisons

Page 13: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

AIP in Grasping (fig2a)

Page 14: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

AIP Grasping: Time Course(fig4a - Left IPS time course)

Page 15: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

AIP Grasping: Representative Individual (fig3b)

Page 16: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

LO in Object Recognition (fig2b)

Page 17: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

LO Recognition(fig4d – Left time course)

Intact

Scrambled

Page 18: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

LO Recognition: Object Type(fig5a)

Page 19: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Cross Comparisons

1) AIP in Recognition

2)LO in Grasping

Page 20: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

AIP in Recognition(fig4b – Right IPS data)

Intact

Scrambled

Page 21: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

AIP Recognition: Object Type (fig5b)

Page 22: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Recognition: LO vs AIP (fig3c)

Page 23: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Grasp & Reach vs ITI (fig3a)

Page 24: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

LO: Grasping = Reaching(fig4c – Left data)

Grasping

Reaching

Page 25: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Comparison Map (fig3d)

Page 26: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Discussion

• Is AIP activated by Intact-Scrambled?

• Is LO activated by Grasping-Reaching?

• Results support hypotheses

• How much do they specify the processes unique to AIP and LO?

Page 27: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

AIP: Contrasts in Grasping Task

• Grasp -Reach– G requires info to preshape hand– More goal directed(?)

• G&R – dark ITI– Both above baseline– Why this baseline?

• What happened to the ‘no response’ condition (Blue LED)?

Page 28: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

LO: Contrasts in 1-Back Task• Intact-Scrambled

– ID and meaning– Recognition – a misnomer?

• Novel > Familiar; Adaptation of LO

• I&S – fixation on dot– Only I greater– Alternative baselines – role of 1-back?

• Scrambled-Intact– Rationale? Interpretation?

Page 29: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Task Comparisons

“AIP is activated more strongly by grasping, when object information is required to preshape the hand, but does not respond to images of objects in the absence of action”

“LO is activated more strongly by objects than scrambled control images, but shows no enhanced activity when real objects are the targets for grasping compared to reaching”

Page 30: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

“Real” vs Images

• Potential for grasping a requirement of AIP?

• Different stimulus types complicate direct comparisons

• Recognition of ‘real’ rectangles– LO adaptation

• Grasping of complex objects (e.g., tools)– AIP in viewing of graspable objects

Page 31: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

AIP: Scrambled-Intact

• Attentional and spatial demands– S>I?– I>S? (Kourtzi & Kanwisher, 2000)

• Is G-R accounted for by attentional demands?– Overlap of G-R and S-C?

Page 32: FMRI Reveals a Dissociation Between Object Grasping and Object Recognition Culham et al. (submitted)

Conclusions• Was the study objective addressed?

• Did results support hypotheses?

• How conclusive are the findings?

• How/why might additional and/or alternative contrast analyses be valuable?