Representational similarity precedes category selectivity in the developing ventral visual pathway

Michael A Cohen, Daniel D Dilks, Kami Koldewyn, Sarah Weigelt, Jenelle Feather, Alexander Je Kell, Boris Keil, Bruce Fischl, Lilla Zöllei, Lawrence Wald, Rebecca Saxe, Nancy Kanwisher

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    Abstract

    Many studies have investigated the development of face-, scene-, and body-selective regions in the ventral visual pathway. This work has primarily focused on comparing the size and univariate selectivity of these neural regions in children versus adults. In contrast, very few studies have investigated the developmental trajectory of more distributed activation patterns within and across neural regions. Here, we scanned both children (ages 5-7) and adults to test the hypothesis that distributed representational patterns arise before category selectivity (for faces, bodies, or scenes) in the ventral pathway. Consistent with this hypothesis, we found mature representational patterns in several ventral pathway regions (e.g., FFA, PPA, etc.), even in children who showed no hint of univariate selectivity. These results suggest that representational patterns emerge first in each region, perhaps forming a scaffold upon which univariate category selectivity can subsequently develop. More generally, our findings demonstrate an important dissociation between category selectivity and distributed response patterns, and raise questions about the relative roles of each in development and adult cognition.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)565-574
    Number of pages10
    JournalNeuroimage
    Volume197
    Early online date8 May 2019
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 15 Aug 2019

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