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Letters to Nature
Nature 392, 598-601 (9 April 1998) | doi:10.1038/33402; Received 16 December 1997; Accepted 16 February 1998
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Professor of Microscopy (W2)
- Friedrich-Schiller-University
- Jena Germany
Senior Faculty Positions
- Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies
- Port St. Lucie, FL
A cortical representation of the local visual environment
Russell Epstein1 & Nancy Kanwisher1
- Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, E10-238, 79 Amherst Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA
Correspondence to: Russell Epstein1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to R.E. (e-mail: Email: epstein@psyche.mit.edu). Additional anatomical information is available on the Web at http://www-bcs.mit.edu/nklab
Abstract
Medial temporal brain regions such as the hippocampal formation and parahippocampal cortex have been generally implicated in navigation1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and visual memory7, 8, 9. However, the specific function of each of these regions is not yet clear. Here we present evidence that a particular area within human parahippocampal cortex is involved in a critical component of navigation: perceiving the local visual environment. This region, which we name the 'parahippocampal place area' (PPA), responds selectively and automatically in functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to passively viewed scenes, but only weakly to single objects and not at all to faces. The critical factor for this activation appears to be the presence in the stimulus of information about the layout of local space. The response in the PPA to scenes with spatial layout but no discrete objects (empty rooms) is as strong as the response to complex meaningful scenes containing multiple objects (the same rooms furnished) and over twice as strong as the response to arrays of multiple objects without three-dimensional spatial context (the furniture from these rooms on a blank background). This response is reduced if the surfaces in the scene are rearranged so that they no longer define a coherent space. We propose that the PPA represents places by encoding the geometry of the local environment.
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