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  • 2018LinnertPhD

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ERP correlates of the interactions between top-down and bottom-up processes in visual object categorization

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@phdthesis{54da2f5d8f5c4599a010a008d542585d,
title = "ERP correlates of the interactions between top-down and bottom-up processes in visual object categorization",
abstract = "Numerous studies have reported category differences between animate and inanimate objects in the early visual ERP components. However, contradictory explanations have been suggested for the underlying processes of such category differences. Both low-level physical differences and higher-level category-specific processes have been shown to modulate the visual ERPs. The present research investigates how physical features (such as amplitude spectrum and spatial frequency) and top-down processes (the categorization task that the participants perform) interact and modulate the visual ERPs. We found ERP correlates of categorical representation for animal and inanimate object categories, as well as early, task-related top-down modulation of the visual ERPs. These results indicate that top-down factors can modulate visual processing both at the level of lower-level physical features and at the level of category representations. The results are discussed in terms of shape- and/or category-selective representations and brain areas in the ventral visual pathway, and they are interpreted within the framework of flexible evidence accumulation processes.",
author = "Szilvia Linnert",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/497",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - ERP correlates of the interactions between top-down and bottom-up processes in visual object categorization

AU - Linnert, Szilvia

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Numerous studies have reported category differences between animate and inanimate objects in the early visual ERP components. However, contradictory explanations have been suggested for the underlying processes of such category differences. Both low-level physical differences and higher-level category-specific processes have been shown to modulate the visual ERPs. The present research investigates how physical features (such as amplitude spectrum and spatial frequency) and top-down processes (the categorization task that the participants perform) interact and modulate the visual ERPs. We found ERP correlates of categorical representation for animal and inanimate object categories, as well as early, task-related top-down modulation of the visual ERPs. These results indicate that top-down factors can modulate visual processing both at the level of lower-level physical features and at the level of category representations. The results are discussed in terms of shape- and/or category-selective representations and brain areas in the ventral visual pathway, and they are interpreted within the framework of flexible evidence accumulation processes.

AB - Numerous studies have reported category differences between animate and inanimate objects in the early visual ERP components. However, contradictory explanations have been suggested for the underlying processes of such category differences. Both low-level physical differences and higher-level category-specific processes have been shown to modulate the visual ERPs. The present research investigates how physical features (such as amplitude spectrum and spatial frequency) and top-down processes (the categorization task that the participants perform) interact and modulate the visual ERPs. We found ERP correlates of categorical representation for animal and inanimate object categories, as well as early, task-related top-down modulation of the visual ERPs. These results indicate that top-down factors can modulate visual processing both at the level of lower-level physical features and at the level of category representations. The results are discussed in terms of shape- and/or category-selective representations and brain areas in the ventral visual pathway, and they are interpreted within the framework of flexible evidence accumulation processes.

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/497

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/497

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -