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Distributed representations of behaviorally relevant object dimensions in the human visual system.

Oliver ContierChris Ian BakerMartin N Hebart
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Object vision is commonly thought to involve a hierarchy of brain regions processing increasingly complex image features, with high-level visual cortex supporting object recognition and categorization. However, object vision supports diverse behavioral goals, suggesting basic limitations of this category-centric framework. To address these limitations, here we map a series of behaviorally-relevant dimensions derived from a large-scale analysis of human similarity judgments directly onto the brain. Our results reveal broadly-distributed representations of behaviorally-relevant information, demonstrating selectivity to a wide variety of novel dimensions while capturing known selectivities for visual features and categories. Behaviorally-relevant dimensions were superior to categories at predicting brain responses, yielding mixed selectivity in much of visual cortex and sparse selectivity in category-selective clusters. This framework reconciles seemingly disparate findings regarding regional specialization, explaining category selectivity as a special case of sparse response profiles among representational dimensions, and suggesting a behavior-centric view on visual processing in the human brain.
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