Selectivity for the Human Body in the Fusiform Gyrus
Top Cited Papers
- 1 January 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 93 (1) , 603-608
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00513.2004
Abstract
Functional neuroimaging studies have revealed human brain regions, notably in the fusiform gyrus, that respond selectively to images of faces as opposed to other kinds of objects. Here we use fMRI to show that the mid-fusiform gyrus responds with nearly the same level of selectivity to images of human bodies without faces, relative to tools and scenes. In a group-average analysis ( n = 22), the fusiform activations identified by contrasting faces versus tools and bodies versus tools are very similar. Analyses of within-subjects regions of interest, however, show that the peaks of the two activations occupy close but distinct locations. In a second experiment, we find that the body-selective fusiform region, but not the face-selective region, responds more to stick figure depictions of bodies than to scrambled controls. This result further distinguishes the two foci and confirms that the body-selective response generalizes to abstract image formats. These results challenge accounts of the mid-fusiform gyrus that focus solely on faces and suggest that this region contains multiple distinct category-selective neural representations.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Faces and objects in macaque cerebral cortexNature Neuroscience, 2003
- Cells in monkey STS responsive to articulated body motions and consequent static posture: a case of implied motion?Neuropsychologia, 2003
- Activity in the Fusiform Gyrus Predicts Conscious Perception of Rubin's Vase–Face IllusionNeuroImage, 2002
- Distributed and Overlapping Representations of Faces and Objects in Ventral Temporal CortexScience, 2001
- A Cortical Area Selective for Visual Processing of the Human BodyScience, 2001
- The Face of ControversyScience, 2001
- Vase or Face? A Neural Correlate of Shape-Selective Grouping Processes in the Human BrainJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2001
- SENSE: Sensitivity encoding for fast MRIMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1999
- Functional magnetic resonance imaging of the differential sensitivity of human visual cortex to faces, letterstrings, and texturesNeuroImage, 1996
- Recognition of Objects and Their Component Parts: Responses of Single Units in the Temporal Cortex of the MacaqueCerebral Cortex, 1994