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Visual and visuomotor processing of hands and tools as a case study of cross talk between the dorsal and ventral streams.

Jorge AlmeidaLénia AmaralFrank E GarceaDiana Aguiar de SousaShan XuBradford Z MahonIsabel Pavão Martins
Published in: Cognitive neuropsychology (2018)
A major principle of organization of the visual system is between a dorsal stream that processes visuomotor information and a ventral stream that supports object recognition. Most research has focused on dissociating processing across these two streams. Here we focus on how the two streams interact. We tested neurologically-intact and impaired participants in an object categorization task over two classes of objects that depend on processing within both streams-hands and tools. We measured how unconscious processing of images from one of these categories (e.g., tools) affects the recognition of images from the other category (i.e., hands). Our findings with neurologically-intact participants demonstrated that processing an image of a hand hampers the subsequent processing of an image of a tool, and vice versa. These results were not present in apraxic patients (N = 3). These findings suggest local and global inhibitory processes working in tandem to co-register information across the two streams.
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