Litcius/Paper detail

Predicting high-level visual areas in the absence of task fMRI

M. Fiona Molloy, Zeynep M. Saygin, David E. Osher

2024Scientific Reports13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The ventral visual stream is organized into units, or functional regions of interest (fROIs), specialized for processing high-level visual categories. Task-based fMRI scans ("localizers") are typically used to identify each individual's nuanced set of fROIs. The unique landscape of an individual's functional activation may rely in large part on their specialized connectivity patterns; recent studies corroborate this by showing that connectivity can predict individual differences in neural responses. We focus on the ventral visual stream and ask: how well can an individual's resting state functional connectivity localize their fROIs for face, body, scene, and object perception? And are the neural processors for any particular visual category better predicted by connectivity than others, suggesting a tighter mechanistic relationship between connectivity and function? We found, among 18 fROIs predicted from connectivity for each subject, all but one were selective for their preferred visual category. Defining an individual's fROIs based on their connectivity patterns yielded regions that were more selective than regions identified from previous studies or atlases in nearly all cases. Overall, we found that in the absence of a domain-specific localizer task, a 10-min resting state scan can be reliably used for defining these fROIs.

Topics & Concepts

Functional connectivityTask (project management)Set (abstract data type)Computer sciencePerceptionVisual processingResting state fMRIFusiform face areaVisual perceptionObject (grammar)Cognitive psychologyNeuroscienceArtificial intelligencePsychologyFace perceptionManagementProgramming languageEconomicsFace Recognition and PerceptionNeural dynamics and brain functionFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies