Cammy Willing

Distributed neural activity during object, spatial and integrated processing in humans

Authors:

  • Emiliana R. Simon-Thomas

  • Kim Brodsky

  • Cammy Willing

  • Rashmi Sinha

  • Robert T. Knight

Date: 2003

PubMed: 12706225

View PDF

Abstract:

Information about the form and the spatial location of objects is seamlessly integrated during visual perception. We used event-related potentials (ERPs) to explore neural activity related to processing form, location or the combination of both kinds of features. Healthy subjects performed three versions of a 'match-to-sample' task: a two-object task, a two-location task and an integrated object-location task. Responses were quickest and most accurate during the integrated task, slower and less accurate in the two-location task and slowest and least accurate in the two-object task. ERPs locked to the 'sample' stimulus at encoding, and to the 'target' stimulus during feature comparison differentiated between tasks. 'Sample' stimulus ERPs exhibited task-specific posterior cortical involvement in processing distinct visual features. 'Target' stimulus ERPs revealed task-related differences in features associated with frontal lobe mediated attentional processes: an early latency P300 showed increased amplitude during the integrated task. Results from this experiment support the view that distinct neural circuits mediate form vs. location processing and that form-location integration engages both pathways and upregulates frontal-parietal association networks.