AI Article Synopsis

  • Neurons in the inferotemporal (IT) cortex are crucial for object perception, but linking their activity to subjective perception has been challenging.
  • Researchers conducted experiments on male macaque monkeys to detect optical impulses in the IT cortex, leading to the creation of "perceptograms" which represent complex hallucinatory experiences induced by neural stimulation.
  • The study revealed that these hallucinations are influenced by factors like visual input, stimulation location, and intensity, paving the way for improved understanding of visual perception, visual prosthetics, and mental disorders.

Article Abstract

Neurons in the inferotemporal (IT) cortex respond selectively to complex visual features, implying their role in object perception. However, perception is subjective and cannot be read out from neural responses; thus, bridging the causal gap between neural activity and perception demands independent characterization of perception. Historically, though, the complexity of the perceptual alterations induced by artificial stimulation of IT cortex has rendered them impossible to quantify. To address this old problem, we tasked male macaque monkeys to detect and report optical impulses delivered to their IT cortex. Combining machine learning with high-throughput behavioral optogenetics, we generated complex and highly specific images that were hard for the animal to distinguish from the state of being cortically stimulated. These images, named "perceptograms" for the first time, reveal and depict the contents of the complex hallucinatory percepts induced by local neural perturbation in IT cortex. Furthermore, we found that the nature and magnitude of these hallucinations highly depend on concurrent visual input, stimulation location, and intensity. Objective characterization of stimulation-induced perceptual events opens the door to developing a mechanistic theory of visual perception. Further, it enables us to make better visual prosthetic devices and gain a greater understanding of visual hallucinations in mental disorders.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11026389PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-47356-8DOI Listing

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