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Cognitive Neuroscience Seminar Series: Prof. Adam Steel

Event Type
Lecture
Sponsor
Cognitive Neuroscience Seminar Series
Location
Beckman Institute Room 2269 (2nd floor tower room)
Date
Oct 28, 2024   12:00 pm  
Speaker
Prof. Adam Steel
Contact
Florin Dolcos
E-Mail
fdolcos@illinois.edu
Views
6
Originating Calendar
Beckman Institute Calendar (internal events only)

Prof. Adam Steel, UIUC, will lecture on "Mechanisms Underlying Perceptual and Mnemonic Interaction in the Brain".

Abstract: Natural behaviors require perceptual and mnemonic information to dynamically interact. For example, when navigating, we continuously exchange information about the current percept with our memory of the surrounding environment. What neural mechanisms allow perceptual and mnemonic representations to interact in the brain? Here, I address this question in the domain of visual scenes using fMRI. First, I describe a topographic dissociation between the brain areas supporting perception and memory of scenes. Specifically, a set of scene-memory related brain areas fall anterior and adjacent to areas involved in scene perception. These memory areas selectively co-fluctuate with the hippocampus during naturalistic scene understanding, constituting a bridge between perceptual and visuospatial representations. Second, using a combination of fMRI and immersive virtual reality, I show that these scene-memory areas uniquely process the extent of known visuospatial context currently outside of view, consistent with a role in jointly representing perceptual and mnemonic information. Finally, I show that a low-level coding mechanism, retinotopy, scaffolds the scene-perception and memory areas’ interaction, such that retinotopic populations in scene perception and memory areas exhibit retinotopically-specific opponent responses during bottom-up perception and top-down recall. Together, these studies provide a novel framework for understanding how perceptual and mnemonic information coexist and interact in the brain, and suggest that perceptual-grounded neural codes play an important role in structuring interregional interaction outside of sensory cortex.


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