NeuroImage (Feb 2021)

Clarifying the role of higher-level cortices in resolving perceptual ambiguity using ultra high field fMRI

  • Logan T. Dowdle,
  • Geoffrey Ghose,
  • Kamil Ugurbil,
  • Essa Yacoub,
  • Luca Vizioli

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 227
p. 117654

Abstract

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The brain is organized into distinct, flexible networks. Within these networks, cognitive variables such as attention can modulate sensory representations in accordance with moment-to-moment behavioral requirements. These modulations can be studied by varying task demands; however, the tasks employed are often incongruent with the postulated functions of a sensory system, limiting the characterization of the system in relation to natural behaviors. Here we combine domain-specific task manipulations and ultra-high field fMRI to study the nature of top-down modulations. We exploited faces, a visual category underpinned by a complex cortical network, and instructed participants to perform either a stimulus-relevant/domain-specific or a stimulus-irrelevant task in the scanner. We found that 1. perceptual ambiguity (i.e. difficulty of achieving a stable percept) is encoded in top-down modulations from higher-level cortices; 2. the right inferior-temporal lobe is active under challenging conditions and uniquely encodes trial-by-trial variability in face perception.

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