1 / 15

JOBB FÉLTEKE DOMINANCIA A VIZUÁLIS STATISZTIKUS TANULÁS KEZDŐFÁZISÁBAN

JOBB FÉLTEKE DOMINANCIA A VIZUÁLIS STATISZTIKUS TANULÁS KEZDŐFÁZISÁBAN. József Fiser, Matthew E. Roser *, Richard N. Aslin # & Michael S. Gazzaniga * Brandeis University, University of Rochester # and Dartmouth College*. Great diversity of proposed hemispheric specializations.

taffy
Download Presentation

JOBB FÉLTEKE DOMINANCIA A VIZUÁLIS STATISZTIKUS TANULÁS KEZDŐFÁZISÁBAN

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. JOBB FÉLTEKE DOMINANCIA A VIZUÁLIS STATISZTIKUS TANULÁS KEZDŐFÁZISÁBAN József Fiser, Matthew E. Roser*, Richard N. Aslin# & Michael S. Gazzaniga* Brandeis University, University of Rochester# and Dartmouth College*

  2. Great diversity of proposed hemispheric specializations

  3. Hemispheric differences in object perception • For highly familiar objects: • RH  metric and positional information LH  abstract categorical information • RH  visual form information • LH  conceptual associations • RH  early information (low SF) • LH  late information (high SF)

  4. Left hemisphere Right hemisphere Object perception requires visual feature learning • First, visual scenes are interpreted via already learned object features • Next, search for new specific spatial co-occurrences and new arrangements among elements (emergence of new feature combinations) occurs • Finally, explicit access to a new feature by developing associations and categorical and semantic meaning

  5. Question: Can the process of learning new visual features be linked to differential involvement of the two brain hemispheres?

  6. Six base-pairs Fit three base-pairs into 3 X 3 grid The basic paradigm Visual feature = spatio-temporal conjunction of separate shapes

  7. A F B E I J A B F I Testing phase • 2AFC task • Base-pair vs. Non-base pair Base-pair Non-base pairs

  8. 2 deg Modifying the paradigm Split the base-pairs

  9. Modified test phase Four lateralized test types Ipsilateral: • Practice: RH Test: RH • Practice: LH Test: LH Contralateral: • Practice: RH Test: LH • Practice: LH Test: RH

  10. Rostrum Splenium (Corballis et al. Neurology 2001) Subjects • Normal subjects: Sixteen college students • Callosotomy patient: V. P.

  11. Experimental procedure for normal subjects • Practice: • 144 scenes alternating randomly between the right and left visual fields • Eye-movements monitored by iView to verify fixation (and hemifield stimulation) • Test: • Six test trials in each of the four test types (Ipsi, Contra) x (RH, LH)

  12. Results with normal subjects Chance Equal learning in all conditions  interhemispheric transfer

  13. V.P.'s testing schedule Data collection in five days 1st day: practice 2nd day: practice, ipsilateraltests, practice, ipsilateral tests 3rd day: practice, ipsilateral tests, practice, ipsilateral tests 4th day: practice, contralateral tests 5th day: practice, contralateral tests

  14. Results with the split brain patient * Chance • Contralateral: No interhemispheric information transfer • Ipsilateral: Strong right hemisphere advantage

  15. Conclusions • Visual statistical learning does not transfer across split hemispheres even when some limited transfer of higher-level word-related information is possible • The initial phase of extracting spatial statistical regularities from the visual input is dominated by right hemisphere processes • These results predict a shift of relative brain activity from the right to the left hemisphere as visual perception shifts from naïve observation to a knowledge-based interpretation of the scene

More Related