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      Scene context and attention independently facilitate MEG decoding of object category.

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          Abstract

          Many of the objects we encounter in our everyday environments would be hard to recognize without any expectations about these objects. For example, a distant silhouette may be perceived as a car because we expect objects of that size, positioned on a road, to be cars. Reflecting the influence of such expectations on visual processing, neuroimaging studies have shown that when objects are poorly visible, expectations derived from scene context facilitate the representations of these objects in visual cortex from around 300 ms after scene onset. The current magnetoencephalography (MEG) study tested whether this facilitation occurs independently of attention and task relevance. Participants viewed degraded objects alone or within scene context while they either attended the scenes (attended condition) or the fixation cross (unattended condition), also temporally directing attention away from the scenes. Results showed that at 300 ms after stimulus onset, multivariate classifiers trained to distinguish clearly visible animate vs inanimate objects generalized to distinguish degraded objects in scenes better than degraded objects alone, despite the added clutter of the scene background. Attention also modulated object representations at this latency, with better category decoding in the attended than the unattended condition. The modulatory effects of context and attention were independent of each other. Finally, data from the current study and a previous study were combined (N = 51) to provide a more detailed temporal characterization of contextual facilitation. These results extend previous work by showing that facilitatory scene-object interactions are independent of the specific task performed on the visual input.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Vision Res
          Vision research
          Elsevier BV
          1878-5646
          0042-6989
          Nov 2024
          : 224
          Affiliations
          [1 ] University of Reading, Centre for Integrative Neuroscience and Neurodynamics, United Kingdom.
          [2 ] Department of Brain Sciences, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel.
          [3 ] Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University, Nijmegen, the Netherlands. Electronic address: marius.peelen@donders.ru.nl.
          Article
          S0042-6989(24)00128-7
          10.1016/j.visres.2024.108484
          39260230
          32959ac0-aeb5-4c98-b135-bd3752164e86
          History

          Scenes,Visual cortex,Attentional modulation,MEG decoding,Predictive processing

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