AI Article Synopsis

  • Categorization is a key cognitive function where the brain groups stimuli into meaningful categories, and this process occurs in different brain areas, especially in primates.
  • *Recent studies suggest that the superior colliculus (SC), a brain region traditionally linked only to reflexive actions, also plays a significant role in higher-order visual categorization tasks.
  • *In experiments with monkeys, researchers found that the SC shows quicker and stronger neural responses during categorization compared to another brain area, the posterior parietal cortex (PPC), and when the SC is inactivated, monkeys struggle with category decisions.

Article Abstract

Categorization is a fundamental cognitive process by which the brain assigns stimuli to behaviorally meaningful groups. Investigations of visual categorization in primates have identified a hierarchy of cortical areas that are involved in the transformation of sensory information into abstract category representations. However, categorization behaviors are ubiquitous across diverse animal species, even those without a neocortex, motivating the possibility that subcortical regions may contribute to abstract cognition in primates. One candidate structure is the superior colliculus (SC), an evolutionarily conserved midbrain region that, although traditionally thought to mediate only reflexive spatial orienting, is involved in cognitive tasks that require spatial orienting. Here, we reveal a novel role of the primate SC in abstract, higher-order visual cognition. We compared neural activity in the SC and the posterior parietal cortex (PPC), a region previously shown to causally contribute to category decisions, while monkeys performed a visual categorization task in which they report their decisions with a hand movement. The SC exhibits stronger and shorter-latency category encoding than the PPC, and inactivation of the SC markedly impairs monkeys' category decisions. These results extend SC's established role in spatial orienting to abstract, non-spatial cognition.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9882166PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.01.17.524416DOI Listing

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