Project Details
Ausbildung kortikaler Repräsentationen, die der langfristigen perzeptuellen Bahnung (Priming) zugrunde liegen: Die Rolle von Verarbeitungseffizienz, Aufmerksamkeit, neuronaler Selektivität und Markmalsverlust
Applicant
Professor Alan Richardson-Klavehn, Ph.D.
Subject Area
Clinical Neurology; Neurosurgery and Neuroradiology
Term
from 2008 to 2011
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 44294592
Priming is an important, sometimes nonconscious, long-term memory function, by which exposure to a stimulus improves the future cognitive processing of that stimulus. Visual perceptual priming is accompanied by decreased neural responses in the ventral visual stream on repetition (retrieval) that have been hypothesized to reflect (1) increased neural processing efficiency, or (2) sharpened neural responding, or (3) loss of neural feature coding. Counterintuitively, priming has now also been linked with neural response decreases in the ventral visual stream on initial exposure (encoding), suggesting (4) that different neural mechanisms may underlie priming-related neural response decreases at encoding and at retrieval, and (5) that top-down attentional factors at encoding may play an important role in the neural basis of priming. Four experiments are proposed that investigate these five hypotheses regarding the neural basis of priming, by explicitly manipulating cognitive processing efficiency, attention, and perceptual feature match between study and test stimuli, using multi-modal measurements of brain activity (fMRI, MEG, EEG) at both encoding and retrieval.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
Participating Person
Professor Dr. Hans-Jochen Heinze