AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study focuses on human pose, which refers to how body parts are positioned relative to each other, highlighting its importance for understanding motion and actions.
  • - Researchers analyzed fMRI responses to various poses in complex natural scenes, finding significant correlations between these responses and human pose models, particularly noting the advantages of a 3D view-independent model.
  • - Key brain areas involved in body perception were identified, including the right posterior superior temporal sulcus, suggesting a complex network that helps interpret dynamic human movements regardless of viewpoint.

Article Abstract

Human pose, defined as the spatial relationships between body parts, carries instrumental information supporting the understanding of motion and action of a person. A substantial body of previous work has identified cortical areas responsive to images of bodies and different body parts. However, the neural basis underlying the visual perception of body part relationships has received less attention. To broaden our understanding of body perception, we analyzed high-resolution fMRI responses to a wide range of poses from over 4,000 complex natural scenes. Using ground-truth annotations and an application of three-dimensional (3D) pose reconstruction algorithms, we compared similarity patterns of cortical activity with similarity patterns built from human pose models with different levels of depth availability and viewpoint dependency. Targeting the challenge of explaining variance in complex natural image responses with interpretable models, we achieved statistically significant correlations between pose models and cortical activity patterns (though performance levels are substantially lower than the noise ceiling). We found that the 3D view-independent pose model, compared with two-dimensional models, better captures the activation from distinct cortical areas, including the right posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS). These areas, together with other pose-selective regions in the LOTC, form a broader, distributed cortical network with greater view-tolerance in more anterior patches. We interpret these findings in light of the computational complexity of natural body images, the wide range of visual tasks supported by pose structures, and possible shared principles for view-invariant processing between articulated objects and ordinary, rigid objects.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11181088PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2317707121DOI Listing

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