Spatial Frequency Tuning of Body Inversion Effects.

Brain Sci

Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience, Department of Languages and Literatures, Communication, Education and Society, University of Udine, 33100 Udine, Italy.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Body inversion effects (BIEs) involve how our brain processes body images, with different brain areas responsive to low or high spatial frequencies.
  • A study with 72 participants revealed that high spatial frequency (HSF) images improved performance in gender discrimination tasks, while both HSF and low spatial frequency (LSF) images were effective for posture discrimination tasks.
  • Individuals with higher autistic traits relied more on local body-part details than on HSF for understanding body postures, suggesting different processing strategies.

Article Abstract

Body inversion effects (BIEs) reflect the deployment of the configural processing of body stimuli. BIE modulates the activity of body-selective areas within both the dorsal and the ventral streams, which are tuned to low (LSF) or high spatial frequencies (HSF), respectively. The specific contribution of different bands to the configural processing of bodies along gender and posture dimensions, however, is still unclear. Seventy-two participants performed a delayed matching-to-sample paradigm in which upright and inverted bodies, differing for gender or posture, could be presented in their original intact form or in the LSF- or HSF-filtered version. In the gender discrimination task, participants' performance was enhanced by the presentation of HSF images. Conversely, for the posture discrimination task, a better performance was shown for either HSF or LSF images. Importantly, comparing the amount of BIE across spatial-frequency conditions, we found greater BIEs for HSF than LSF images in both tasks, indicating that configural body processing may be better supported by HSF information, which will bias processing in the ventral stream areas. Finally, the exploitation of HSF information for the configural processing of body postures was lower in individuals with higher autistic traits, likely reflecting a stronger reliance on the local processing of body-part details.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9954120PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci13020190DOI Listing

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