■ REVIEW : Parallel Processing, Asynchronous Perception, and a Distributed System of Consciousness in Vision
- 1 September 1998
- journal article
- review article
- Published by SAGE Publications in The Neuroscientist
- Vol. 4 (5) , 365-372
- https://doi.org/10.1177/107385849800400518
Abstract
The primate visual brain is characterized by a set of parallel, multistage systems that are specialized to process different attributes of the visual scene. They occupy spatially distinct positions in the visual brain and do not project to a unique common area. These processing systems are also perceptual systems, because the result of activity in each leads to the perception of the relevant visual attribute. But the different processing-perceptual systems require different times to complete their tasks, thus leading to another char acteristic of the visual brain, a temporal hierarchy for perception. Together, these two characteristics—of parallel processing and temporal hierarchy—suggest that each processing-perceptual system can act with fair autonomy. Studies of the diseased human brain show that activity in separate processing-perceptual systems—especially those concerned with color and motion—can lead to the perception of the relevant attribute even when the other processing systems are inactive and that activity in individual processing- perceptual systems has a conscious experience as a correlate, which suggests that consciousness itself is a modular, distributed system. NEUROSCIENTIST 4:365-372, 1998Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- New images from human visual cortexTrends in Neurosciences, 1996
- Object-related activity revealed by functional magnetic resonance imaging in human occipital cortex.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1995
- Analysis of Retinotopic Maps in Extrastriate CortexCerebral Cortex, 1994
- CEREBRAL AKINETOPSIA (VISUAL MOTION BLINDNESS)Brain, 1991
- Distributed Hierarchical Processing in the Primate Cerebral CortexCerebral Cortex, 1991
- A CENTURY OF CEREBRAL ACHROMATOPSIABrain, 1990
- Neuronal Mechanisms of Motion PerceptionCold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology, 1990
- Intact recognition of facial expression, gender, and age in patients with impaired recognition of face identityNeurology, 1988
- Cortical connections of visual area MT in the macaqueJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1986
- Functional specialisation in the visual cortex of the rhesus monkeyNature, 1978