Title of article :
Hemispheric specialization for spatial frequency processing in the analysis of natural scenes
Author/Authors :
Peyrin، نويسنده , , Carole and Chauvin، نويسنده , , Alan and Chokron، نويسنده , , Sylvie and Marendaz، نويسنده , , Christian، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages :
5
From page :
278
To page :
282
Abstract :
Experimental data coming from visual cognitive sciences suggest that visual analysis starts with a parallel extraction of different visual attributes at different scales/frequencies. Neuropsychological and functional imagery data have suggested that each hemisphere (at the level of temporo–parietal junctions—TPJ) could play a key role in spatial frequency processing: The right TPJ should predominantly be involved in low spatial frequency (LFs) analysis and the left TPJ in high spatial frequency (HFs) analysis. Nevertheless, this functional hypothesis had been inferred from data obtained when using the hierarchical form paradigm, without any explicit spatial frequency manipulation per se. The aims of this research are (i) to investigate, in healthy subjects, the hemispheric asymmetry hypothesis with an explicit manipulation of spatial frequencies of natural scenes and (ii) to examine whether the ‘precedence effect’ (the relative rapidity of LFs and HFs processing) depends on the visual field of scene presentation or not. For this purpose, participants were to identify either non-filtered or LFs and HFs filtered target scene displayed either in the left, central, or right visual field. Results showed a hemispheric specialization for spatial frequency processing and different ‘precedence effects’ depending on the visual field of presentation.
Journal title :
Brain and Cognition
Serial Year :
2003
Journal title :
Brain and Cognition
Record number :
2248559
Link To Document :
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