Frontal lobe mechanisms subserving vision-for-action versus vision-for-perception

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Abstract

In the typical course of daily events, we often gaze at an object, attend to its features and its place, reach toward it and grasp it, all with an awareness of what we are doing at the time. But behavior is not always thus. Gaze, attention, limb movement direction and awareness can be behaviorally dissociated from each other, and this review focuses on one such dissociation: that between the perception of an object and the use of that object's inherent spatial and nonspatial information for mediating visuomotor control. We review evidence that partially different neuronal systems underlie these two aspects of visual information processing. In neurophysiological studies of the primate frontal lobe, it has been possible to demonstrate that neural signals appearing to be visual responses reflect, at least in part, the motor significance of a stimulus. This finding has been confirmed, in separate studies, for both spatial and nonspatial visual information and supports the hypothesis that some frontal cortex activity reflects the selection and guidance of action rather than the properties of visual stimuli, per se. These findings are discussed in the context of neuropsychological studies indicating that accurate and appropriate movements are possible without perceptual awareness of the information guiding those movements. © 1995.

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Boussaoud, D., di Pellegrino, G., & Wise, S. P. (1995, December 14). Frontal lobe mechanisms subserving vision-for-action versus vision-for-perception. Behavioural Brain Research. https://doi.org/10.1016/0166-4328(96)00055-1

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