Inferior Occipital Gyrus Is Organized along Common Gradients of Spatial and Face-Part Selectivity

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Abstract

The ventral visual stream of the human brain is subdivided into patches with categorical stimulus preferences, like faces or scenes. However, the functional organization within these areas is less clear. Here, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging and vertex-wise tuning models to independently probe spatial and face-part preferences in the inferior occipital gyrus (IOG) of healthy adult males and females. The majority of responses were well explained by Gaussian population tuning curves for both retinotopic location and the preferred relative position within a face. Parameter maps revealed a common gradient of spatial and face-part selectivity, with the width of tuning curves drastically increasing from posterior to anterior IOG. Tuning peaks clustered more idiosyncratically but were also correlated across maps of visual and face space. Preferences for the upper visual field went along with significantly increased coverage of the upper half of the face, matching recently discovered biases in human perception. Our findings reveal a broad range of neural face-part selectivity in IOG, ranging from narrow to “holistic.” IOG is functionally organized along this gradient, which in turn is correlated with retinotopy.

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de Haas, B., Sereno, M. I., & Samuel Schwarzkopf, D. (2021). Inferior Occipital Gyrus Is Organized along Common Gradients of Spatial and Face-Part Selectivity. Journal of Neuroscience, 41(25), 5511–5521. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2415-20.2021

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