When primates (both human and non-human) learn to categorize simple visual or acoustic stimuli by means of non-verbal matching tasks, two types of changes occur in their brain: early sensory cortices increase the precision with which they encode sensory information, and parietal and lateral prefrontal cortices develop a categorical response to the stimuli. Contrary to non-human animals, however, our species mostly constructs categories using linguistic labels. Moreover, we naturally tend to define categories by means of multiple sensory features of the stimuli. Here we trained adult subjects to parse a novel audiovisual stimulus space into 4 orthogonal categories, by associating each category to a specific symbol. We then used multi-voxel p...
Comparative studies of categorization using non-human animals are difficult to conduct because studi...
AbstractObjects differ along many stimulus dimensions, but observers typically group them into fewer...
<div><p>Humans are highly adept at categorizing visual stimuli, but studies of human categorization ...
Abstract When primates (both human and non-human) learn to categorize simple visual or acoustic stim...
Categorization is one of the primary mechanisms underlying human perception and cognition, but how h...
To come to grips with the complexity of the world, primates and other species have developed the abi...
To come to grips with the complexity of the world, primates and other species have developed the abi...
The formation of cross-modal object representations was investigated using a novel paradigm that was...
To come to grips with the complexity of the world, primates and other species have developed the abi...
To come to grips with the complexity of the world, primates and other species have developed the abi...
The ability to recognize the behavioral significance, or category membership, of sensory stimuli is ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2002.I...
Marieke van der Linden investigated the neural mechanisms underlying category formation in the human...
Our daily lives are pervaded by sounds, predominantly speech, music, and environmental sounds. We re...
Comparative studies of categorization using non-human animals are difficult to conduct because studi...
Comparative studies of categorization using non-human animals are difficult to conduct because studi...
AbstractObjects differ along many stimulus dimensions, but observers typically group them into fewer...
<div><p>Humans are highly adept at categorizing visual stimuli, but studies of human categorization ...
Abstract When primates (both human and non-human) learn to categorize simple visual or acoustic stim...
Categorization is one of the primary mechanisms underlying human perception and cognition, but how h...
To come to grips with the complexity of the world, primates and other species have developed the abi...
To come to grips with the complexity of the world, primates and other species have developed the abi...
The formation of cross-modal object representations was investigated using a novel paradigm that was...
To come to grips with the complexity of the world, primates and other species have developed the abi...
To come to grips with the complexity of the world, primates and other species have developed the abi...
The ability to recognize the behavioral significance, or category membership, of sensory stimuli is ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2002.I...
Marieke van der Linden investigated the neural mechanisms underlying category formation in the human...
Our daily lives are pervaded by sounds, predominantly speech, music, and environmental sounds. We re...
Comparative studies of categorization using non-human animals are difficult to conduct because studi...
Comparative studies of categorization using non-human animals are difficult to conduct because studi...
AbstractObjects differ along many stimulus dimensions, but observers typically group them into fewer...
<div><p>Humans are highly adept at categorizing visual stimuli, but studies of human categorization ...