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Dissociation of sensitivity to spatial frequency in word and face preferential areas of the fusiform gyrus.


ABSTRACT: Different cortical regions within the ventral occipitotemporal junction have been reported to show preferential responses to particular objects. Thus, it is argued that there is evidence for a left-lateralized visual word form area and a right-lateralized fusiform face area, but the unique specialization of these areas remains controversial. Words are characterized by greater power in the high spatial frequency (SF) range, whereas faces comprise a broader range of high and low frequencies. We investigated how these high-order visual association areas respond to simple sine-wave gratings that varied in SF. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we demonstrated lateralization of activity that was concordant with the low-level visual property of words and faces; left occipitotemporal cortex is more strongly activated by high than by low SF gratings, whereas the right occipitotemporal cortex responded more to low than high spatial frequencies. Therefore, the SF of a visual stimulus may bias the lateralization of processing irrespective of its higher order properties.

SUBMITTER: Woodhead ZV 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3169659 | biostudies-literature | 2011 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Dissociation of sensitivity to spatial frequency in word and face preferential areas of the fusiform gyrus.

Woodhead Zoe Victoria Joan ZV   Wise Richard James Surtees RJ   Sereno Marty M   Leech Robert R  

Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) 20110302 10


Different cortical regions within the ventral occipitotemporal junction have been reported to show preferential responses to particular objects. Thus, it is argued that there is evidence for a left-lateralized visual word form area and a right-lateralized fusiform face area, but the unique specialization of these areas remains controversial. Words are characterized by greater power in the high spatial frequency (SF) range, whereas faces comprise a broader range of high and low frequencies. We in  ...[more]

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