6 results on '"Dering, Benjamin"'
Search Results
2. Dissociating Attention Effects from Categorical Perception with ERP Functional Microstates.
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Dering, Benjamin and Donaldson, David I.
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ATTENTION , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *VISUAL perception , *BRAIN imaging , *FACE perception - Abstract
When faces appear in our visual environment we naturally attend to them, possibly to the detriment of other visual information. Evidence from behavioural studies suggests that faces capture attention because they are more salient than other types of visual stimuli, reflecting a category-dependent modulation of attention. By contrast, neuroimaging data has led to a domain-specific account of face perception that rules out the direct contribution of attention, suggesting a dedicated neural network for face perception. Here we sought to dissociate effects of attention from categorical perception using Event Related Potentials. Participants viewed physically matched face and butterfly images, with each category acting as a target stimulus during different blocks in an oddball paradigm. Using a data-driven approach based on functional microstates, we show that the locus of endogenous attention effects with ERPs occurs in the N1 time range. Earlier categorical effects were also found around the level of the P1, reflecting either an exogenous increase in attention towards face stimuli, or a putative face-selective measure. Both category and attention effects were dissociable from one another hinting at the role that faces may play in early capturing of attention before top-down control of attention is observed. Our data support the conclusion that certain object categories, in this experiment, faces, may capture attention before top-down voluntary control of attention is initiated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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3. Seeing Objects through the Language Glass.
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Boutonnet, Bastien, Dering, Benjamin, Viñas-Guasch, Nestor, and Thierry, Guillaume
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HYPOTHESIS , *SENSORY perception , *CATEGORIZATION (Psychology) , *ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *ENGLISH language , *NATIVE language , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) - Abstract
Recent streams of research support the Whorfian hypothesis according to which language affects one's perception of the world. However, studies of object categorization in different languages have heavily relied on behavioral measures that are fuzzy and inconsistent. Here, we provide the first electrophysiological evidence for unconscious effects of language terminology on object perception. Whereas English has two words for cup and mug, Spanish labels those two objects with the word "taza." We tested native speakers of Spanish and English in an object detection task using a visual oddball paradigm, while measuring event-related brain potentials. The early deviant-related negativity elicited by deviant stimuli was greater in English than in Spanish participants. This effect, which relates to the existence of two labels in English versus one in Spanish, substantiates the neurophysiological evidence that language-specific terminology affects object categorization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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4. Category-sensitivity in the N170 range: A question of topography and inversion, not one of amplitude
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Boehm, Stephan G., Dering, Benjamin, and Thierry, Guillaume
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FACE perception , *ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *NEUROPHYSIOLOGY , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *ELECTRODES , *NEUROLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: Event-related potential studies have identified the N170 as the key neurophysiological marker of human face processing. This functional association relies on the observation of a larger N170 amplitude to faces than items from all other visual object categories. However, N170 amplitude is modulated by stimulus variations like viewpoint, size and symmetry, and studies comparing similarly sized and symmetric full-front faces and other objects have failed to find amplitude differences. Here we tested whether the effect of inversion – an increase in N170 amplitude seen for faces presented upside down – is similarly observed for full-front views of cars. Participants discriminated pictures of faces and cars, which were presented upright and inverted, and either in full-front view or varying in size, orientation and viewpoint. For upright stimuli, the N170 was stronger for faces than cars at some electrode sites, but of comparable amplitude at others, as shown by topographical differences. The N170 for inverted faces and cars was delayed, with a stronger delay for faces than cars. Inversion increased N170 amplitude for faces, while modulations for full-front view cars were non-significant or N170 amplitude was reduced. These results further limit the widely acknowledged principle of an association between N170 and visual object categorization. Potential face-sensitivity in the N170 range may therefore rely on topographic differences and effects of inversion, rather than amplitude differences. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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5. Perceptual shift in bilingualism: Brain potentials reveal plasticity in pre-attentive colour perception
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Athanasopoulos, Panos, Dering, Benjamin, Wiggett, Alison, Kuipers, Jan-Rouke, and Thierry, Guillaume
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COLOR vision , *BILINGUALISM , *VISUAL perception , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *NEUROPLASTICITY , *ATTENTION , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *PERCEPTUAL learning - Abstract
Abstract: The validity of the linguistic relativity principle continues to stimulate vigorous debate and research. The debate has recently shifted from the behavioural investigation arena to a more biologically grounded field, in which tangible physiological evidence for language effects on perception can be obtained. Using brain potentials in a colour oddball detection task with Greek and English speakers, a recent study suggests that language effects may exist at early stages of perceptual integration [Thierry, G., Athanasopoulos, P., Wiggett, A., Dering, B., & Kuipers, J. (2009). Unconscious effects of language-specific terminology on pre-attentive colour perception. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 106, 4567–4570]. In this paper, we test whether in Greek speakers exposure to a new cultural environment (UK) with contrasting colour terminology from their native language affects early perceptual processing as indexed by an electrophysiological correlate of visual detection of colour luminance. We also report semantic mapping of native colour terms and colour similarity judgements. Results reveal convergence of linguistic descriptions, cognitive processing, and early perception of colour in bilinguals. This result demonstrates for the first time substantial plasticity in early, pre-attentive colour perception and has important implications for the mechanisms that are involved in perceptual changes during the processes of language learning and acculturation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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6. Luminance-polarity distribution across the symmetry axis affects the electrophysiological response to symmetry.
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Wright, Damien, Mitchell, Claire, Dering, Benjamin R., and Gheorghiu, Elena
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ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *CELL polarity , *STIMULUS & response (Biology) , *MICROSTATES (Statistical mechanics) , *BRAIN physiology - Abstract
Electrophysiological studies of symmetry have found a difference wave termed the Sustained Posterior Negativity (SPN) related to the presence of symmetry. Yet the extent to which the SPN is modulated by luminance-polarity and colour content is unknown. Here we examine how luminance-polarity distribution across the symmetry axis, grouping by luminance polarity, and the number of colours in the stimuli, modulate the SPN. Stimuli were dot patterns arranged either symmetrically or quasi-randomly. There were several arrangements: ’ segregated ’-symmetric dots were of one polarity and randomly-positioned dots were of the other; ‘ unsegregated ’-symmetric dots were of both polarities in equal proportions; ‘ anti-symmetric ’-dots were of opposite polarity across the symmetry axis; ‘ polarity-grouped anti-symmetric ’-this is the same as anti-symmetric but with half the pattern of one polarity and the other half of opposite polarity; multi-colour symmetric patterns made of two, three to four colours. We found that the SPN is: (i) reduced by the amount of position-symmetry, (ii) sensitive to luminance-polarity mismatch across the symmetry axis, and (iii) not modulated by the number of colours in the stimuli. Our results show that the sustained nature of the SPN coincides with the late onset of a topographic microstate sensitive to symmetry. These findings emphasise the importance of not only position symmetry, but also luminance polarity matching across the symmetry axis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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