How the Visual Cortex Handles Stimulus Noise: Insights from Amblyopia |
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Authors: | éva M. Bankó Judit K?rtvélyes Béla Weiss Zoltán Vidnyánszky |
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Affiliation: | 1. Faculty of Information Technology, Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Budapest, Hungary.; 2. Department of Ophthalmology, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary.; 3. MR Research Center, Szentágothai J. Knowledge Center - Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary.; 4. Department of Cognitive Science, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Budapest, Hungary.; University of Montreal, Canada, |
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Abstract: | Adding noise to a visual image makes object recognition more effortful and has a widespread effect on human electrophysiological responses. However, visual cortical processes directly involved in handling the stimulus noise have yet to be identified and dissociated from the modulation of the neural responses due to the deteriorated structural information and increased stimulus uncertainty in the case of noisy images. Here we show that the impairment of face gender categorization performance in the case of noisy images in amblyopic patients correlates with amblyopic deficits measured in the noise-induced modulation of the P1/P2 components of single-trial event-related potentials (ERP). On the other hand, the N170 ERP component is similarly affected by the presence of noise in the two eyes and its modulation does not predict the behavioral deficit. These results have revealed that the efficient processing of noisy images depends on the engagement of additional processing resources both at the early, feature-specific as well as later, object-level stages of visual cortical processing reflected in the P1 and P2 ERP components, respectively. Our findings also suggest that noise-induced modulation of the N170 component might reflect diminished face-selective neuronal responses to face images with deteriorated structural information. |
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