SummaryThe ability to classify visual objects into discrete categories (“friend” versus “foe”; “edible” versus “poisonous”) is essential for survival and is a fundamental cognitive function. The cortical substrates that mediate this function, however, have not been identified in humans. To identify brain regions involved in stimulus categorization, we developed a task in which subjects classified stimuli according to a variable categorical boundary. Psychophysical functions were used to define a decision variable, categorization uncertainty, which was systematically manipulated. Using event-related functional MRI, we discovered that activity in a fronto-striatal-thalamic network, consisting of the medial frontal gyrus, anterior insula, vent...
The ability to categorize stimuli into discrete behaviourally relevant groups is an essential cognit...
SummaryObject category learning is a fundamental ability, requiring the combination of “bottom-up” s...
Abstract When primates (both human and non-human) learn to categorize simple visual or acoustic stim...
SummaryThe ability to classify visual objects into discrete categories (“friend” versus “foe”; “edib...
How does the brain recognize 'meaning' of sensory stimuli? Through experience we learn to group stim...
AbstractObjects differ along many stimulus dimensions, but observers typically group them into fewer...
AbstractA computational framework that can account for object categorization and identification has ...
This paper investigated the nature of mental representation of categorical knowledge by examining th...
<p>Central to human intelligence, visual categorization is a skill that is both remarkably fast and ...
SummaryMaking successful decisions under uncertainty due to noisy sensory signals is thought to bene...
Central to human intelligence, visual categorization is a skill that is both remarkably fast and acc...
To understand visual cognition, it is imperative to determine when, how and with what information th...
The ability to recognize the behavioral significance, or category membership, of sensory stimuli is ...
SummaryActs of cognition can be described at different levels of analysis: what behavior should char...
Categorization is one of the primary mechanisms underlying human perception and cognition, but how h...
The ability to categorize stimuli into discrete behaviourally relevant groups is an essential cognit...
SummaryObject category learning is a fundamental ability, requiring the combination of “bottom-up” s...
Abstract When primates (both human and non-human) learn to categorize simple visual or acoustic stim...
SummaryThe ability to classify visual objects into discrete categories (“friend” versus “foe”; “edib...
How does the brain recognize 'meaning' of sensory stimuli? Through experience we learn to group stim...
AbstractObjects differ along many stimulus dimensions, but observers typically group them into fewer...
AbstractA computational framework that can account for object categorization and identification has ...
This paper investigated the nature of mental representation of categorical knowledge by examining th...
<p>Central to human intelligence, visual categorization is a skill that is both remarkably fast and ...
SummaryMaking successful decisions under uncertainty due to noisy sensory signals is thought to bene...
Central to human intelligence, visual categorization is a skill that is both remarkably fast and acc...
To understand visual cognition, it is imperative to determine when, how and with what information th...
The ability to recognize the behavioral significance, or category membership, of sensory stimuli is ...
SummaryActs of cognition can be described at different levels of analysis: what behavior should char...
Categorization is one of the primary mechanisms underlying human perception and cognition, but how h...
The ability to categorize stimuli into discrete behaviourally relevant groups is an essential cognit...
SummaryObject category learning is a fundamental ability, requiring the combination of “bottom-up” s...
Abstract When primates (both human and non-human) learn to categorize simple visual or acoustic stim...