Scene content is predominantly conveyed by high spatial frequencies in scene-selective visual cortex
Published 2017 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Scene content is predominantly conveyed by high spatial frequencies in scene-selective visual cortex
Authors
Keywords
Vision, Functional magnetic resonance imaging, Behavior, Neuroimaging, Visual system, Butterworth filters, Luminance, Visual cortex
Journal
PLoS One
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages e0189828
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Online
2017-12-23
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0189828
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Contributions of low- and high-level properties to neural processing of visual scenes in the human brain
- (2017) Iris I. A. Groen et al. PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
- The Occipital Place Area Is Causally Involved in Representing Environmental Boundaries during Navigation
- (2016) Joshua B. Julian et al. CURRENT BIOLOGY
- Rectilinear Edge Selectivity Is Insufficient to Explain the Category Selectivity of the Parahippocampal Place Area
- (2016) Peter B. Bryan et al. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
- The occipital place area represents the local elements of scenes
- (2016) Frederik S. Kamps et al. NEUROIMAGE
- Patterns of neural response in scene-selective regions of the human brain are affected by low-level manipulations of spatial frequency
- (2016) David M. Watson et al. NEUROIMAGE
- Contour junctions underlie neural representations of scene categories in high-level human visual cortex
- (2016) Heeyoung Choo et al. NEUROIMAGE
- Neural representation of scene boundaries
- (2016) Katrina Ferrara et al. NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA
- Spatial frequency processing in scene-selective cortical regions
- (2015) Louise Kauffmann et al. NEUROIMAGE
- Coarse-to-fine Categorization of Visual Scenes in Scene-selective Cortex
- (2014) Benoit Musel et al. JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
- Thinking Outside the Box: Rectilinear Shapes Selectively Activate Scene-Selective Cortex
- (2014) S. Nasr et al. JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
- Patterns of response to visual scenes are linked to the low-level properties of the image
- (2014) David M. Watson et al. NEUROIMAGE
- The Occipital Place Area Is Causally and Selectively Involved in Scene Perception
- (2013) D. D. Dilks et al. JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
- Differential connectivity within the Parahippocampal Place Area
- (2013) Christopher Baldassano et al. NEUROIMAGE
- LIBSVM
- (2012) Chih-Chung Chang et al. ACM Transactions on Intelligent Systems and Technology
- Disentangling Scene Content from Spatial Boundary: Complementary Roles for the Parahippocampal Place Area and Lateral Occipital Complex in Representing Real-World Scenes
- (2011) S. Park et al. JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
- Real-World Scene Representations in High-Level Visual Cortex: It's the Spaces More Than the Places
- (2011) D. J. Kravitz et al. JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
- Simple line drawings suffice for functional MRI decoding of natural scene categories
- (2011) D. B. Walther et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- The “Parahippocampal Place Area” Responds Preferentially to High Spatial Frequencies in Humans and Monkeys
- (2011) Reza Rajimehr et al. PLOS BIOLOGY
- Retinotopic Organization of Human Ventral Visual Cortex
- (2009) M. J. Arcaro et al. JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
- Natural Scene Categories Revealed in Distributed Patterns of Activity in the Human Brain
- (2009) D. B. Walther et al. JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
- Parahippocampal and retrosplenial contributions to human spatial navigation
- (2008) Russell A. Epstein TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES
- Vision Egg: An Open-Source Library for Realtime Visual Stimulus Generation
- (2008) Andrew D. Straw Frontiers in Neuroinformatics
Discover Peeref hubs
Discuss science. Find collaborators. Network.
Join a conversationAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started