The variation of the appearance such as gloss provides one of the most important information for object recognition. However, little is known about the neural mechanisms related to the perception of gloss. We examined whether the neurons in the inferior temporal (IT) cortex of the monkeys are coding gloss of objects. We made visual stimuli which have various surface reflectance properties, and tested responses of IT neurons to these stimuli while a monkey was performing a visual fixation task. We found that there exist neurons in the lower bank of the superior temporal sulcus that selectively responded to specific stimuli. The selectivity was largely maintained when the object shape or illumination condition was changed. In contrast, neural...
An important question about color vision is how does the brain represent the color of an object? The...
Visually identifying glossy surfaces can be crucial for survival (e.g., ice patches on a road), yet ...
The inferotemporal cortex in primates is thought to be the primary region that subserves object reco...
AbstractSurface gloss is an important cue to the material properties of objects. Recent progress in ...
This chapter reviews experimental work in macaque monkeys concerning the processing of visual inform...
We conducted two fMRI experiments to clarify what cortical areas are involved in perception of surfa...
The inferotemporal cortex of the macaque monkey mediates the recognition of objects in the visual wo...
AbstractGlossiness is the visual appearance of an object's surface as defined by its surface reflect...
Although the relationship between color signal and luminance signal is an important problem in visua...
The visual impression of an object’s surface reflectance (‘gloss’) relies on a range of visual cues,...
The notion of the temporal lobe being involved in object recognition—as it emerged from clinical and...
Representations of the texture of food in the primate orbitofrontal cortex: neurons responding to vi...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017Primates use vision to understand and interact with th...
AbstractBackground: The inferior temporal cortex (IT) of the monkey has long been known to play an e...
International audienceNatural texture of an object is an important cue for recognition. In real cond...
An important question about color vision is how does the brain represent the color of an object? The...
Visually identifying glossy surfaces can be crucial for survival (e.g., ice patches on a road), yet ...
The inferotemporal cortex in primates is thought to be the primary region that subserves object reco...
AbstractSurface gloss is an important cue to the material properties of objects. Recent progress in ...
This chapter reviews experimental work in macaque monkeys concerning the processing of visual inform...
We conducted two fMRI experiments to clarify what cortical areas are involved in perception of surfa...
The inferotemporal cortex of the macaque monkey mediates the recognition of objects in the visual wo...
AbstractGlossiness is the visual appearance of an object's surface as defined by its surface reflect...
Although the relationship between color signal and luminance signal is an important problem in visua...
The visual impression of an object’s surface reflectance (‘gloss’) relies on a range of visual cues,...
The notion of the temporal lobe being involved in object recognition—as it emerged from clinical and...
Representations of the texture of food in the primate orbitofrontal cortex: neurons responding to vi...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017Primates use vision to understand and interact with th...
AbstractBackground: The inferior temporal cortex (IT) of the monkey has long been known to play an e...
International audienceNatural texture of an object is an important cue for recognition. In real cond...
An important question about color vision is how does the brain represent the color of an object? The...
Visually identifying glossy surfaces can be crucial for survival (e.g., ice patches on a road), yet ...
The inferotemporal cortex in primates is thought to be the primary region that subserves object reco...