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Behavioral and Neural Representations of Spatial Directions across Words Schemas and Images

机译:跨单词图式和图像的空间方向的行为和神经表示

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摘要

Modern spatial navigation requires fluency with multiple representational formats, including visual scenes, signs, and words. These formats convey different information. Visual scenes are rich and specific but contain extraneous details. Arrows, as an example of signs, are schematic representations in which the extraneous details are eliminated, but analog spatial properties are preserved. Words eliminate all spatial information and convey spatial directions in a purely abstract form. How does the human brain compute spatial directions within and across these formats? To investigate this question, we conducted two experiments on men and women: a behavioral study that was preregistered and a neuroimaging study using multivoxel pattern analysis of fMRI data to uncover similarities and differences among representational formats. Participants in the behavioral study viewed spatial directions presented as images, schemas, or words (e.g., “left”), and responded to each trial, indicating whether the spatial direction was the same or different as the one viewed previously. They responded more quickly to schemas and words than images, despite the visual complexity of stimuli being matched. Participants in the fMRI study performed the same task but responded only to occasional catch trials. Spatial directions in images were decodable in the intraparietal sulcus bilaterally but were not in schemas and words. Spatial directions were also decodable between all three formats. These results suggest that intraparietal sulcus plays a role in calculating spatial directions in visual scenes, but this neural circuitry may be bypassed when the spatial directions are presented as schemas or words.>SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Human navigators encounter spatial directions in various formats: words (“turn left”), schematic signs (an arrow showing a left turn), and visual scenes (a road turning left). The brain must transform these spatial directions into a plan for action. Here, we investigate similarities and differences between neural representations of these formats. We found that bilateral intraparietal sulci represent spatial directions in visual scenes and across the three formats. We also found that participants respond quickest to schemas, then words, then images, suggesting that spatial directions in abstract formats are easier to interpret than concrete formats. These results support a model of spatial direction interpretation in which spatial directions are either computed for real world action or computed for efficient visual comparison.
机译:现代空间导航需要流利的多种表示形式,包括视觉场景,标志和文字。这些格式传达了不同的信息。视觉场景丰富而具体,但包含无关的细节。箭头作为符号的示例,是示意图,其中消除了多余的细节,但保留了模拟空间特性。单词消除了所有空间信息,并以纯粹的抽象形式传达了空间方向。人脑如何计算这些格式之内和之间的空间方向?为了调查这个问题,我们对男人和女人进行了两个实验:一个预先注册的行为研究和一个使用fMRI数据的多体素模式分析进行神经成像研究,以揭示代表性格式之间的异同。行为研究的参与者查看了以图像,图解或文字(例如“左”)形式呈现的空间方向,并对每项试验做出了回应,指出了空间方向是否与之前查看的方向相同或不同。尽管对刺激的视觉复杂性进行了匹配,但他们对图式和文字的反应比对图像的反应更快。功能磁共振成像研究的参与者执行了相同的任务,但仅对偶尔的捕获试验做出了反应。图像中的空间方向在双侧顶壁沟中是可解码的,但在图式和单词中却不是。所有三种格式之间的空间方向也是可解码的。这些结果表明,顶上沟在视觉场景中的空间方向计算中起着一定的作用,但是当空间方向以图式或文字形式出现时,可能会绕过该神经回路。>重要声明各种格式:文字(“向左转”),示意性标志(向左转的箭头)和视觉场景(向左转的道路)。大脑必须将这些空间方向转变为行动计划。在这里,我们调查这些格式的神经表示之间的异同。我们发现双侧顶壁沟在视觉场景和三种格式中代表了空间方向。我们还发现,参与者对图式,单词,图像的反应最快,这表明抽象格式的空间方向比具体格式更容易解释。这些结果支持空间方向解释模型,其中空间方向要么针对现实世界的动作而计算,要么针对有效的视觉比较而计算。

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