Independent Neuronal Representation of Facial and Vocal Identity in the Monkey Hippocampus and Inferotemporal Cortex.
暂无分享,去创建一个
Sylvia Wirth | Aurélie Planté | Jean-René Duhamel | Julia Sliwa | J. Duhamel | S. Wirth | Julia Sliwa | A. Planté
[1] Christoph Kayser,et al. Voice Cells in the Primate Temporal Lobe , 2011, Current Biology.
[2] D. Rendall,et al. Vocal recognition of individuals and kin in free-ranging rhesus monkeys , 1996, Animal Behaviour.
[3] Hisao Nishijo,et al. Differential characteristics of face neuron responses within the anterior superior temporal sulcus of macaques. , 2005, Journal of neurophysiology.
[4] Nicola S. Clayton,et al. Looking for episodic memory in animals and young children: Prospects for a new minimalism , 2009, Neuropsychologia.
[5] S. Campanella,et al. Cross-modal interactions between human faces and voices involved in person recognition , 2011, Cortex.
[6] M. Brecht,et al. Weak and Nondiscriminative Responses to Conspecifics in the Rat Hippocampus , 2012, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[7] P. Belin. Voice processing in human and non-human primates , 2006, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[8] T. Rogers,et al. Where do you know what you know? The representation of semantic knowledge in the human brain , 2007, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
[9] Christoph D. Dahl,et al. Individuation and holistic processing of faces in rhesus monkeys , 2007, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[10] A. Giraud,et al. Implicit Multisensory Associations Influence Voice Recognition , 2006, PLoS biology.
[11] T. Ono,et al. Spatial- and Task-Dependent Neuronal Responses during Real and Virtual Translocation in the Monkey Hippocampal Formation , 1999, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[12] Nikos K. Logothetis,et al. Facial-Expression and Gaze-Selective Responses in the Monkey Amygdala , 2007, Current Biology.
[13] Y. Cohen,et al. Rhesus Macaques Recognize Unique Multimodal Face-Voice Relations of Familiar Individuals and Not of Unfamiliar Ones , 2013, Brain, Behavior and Evolution.
[14] J. Richard Hanley,et al. Why are Familiar-Only Experiences More Frequent for Voices than for Faces? , 2000, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.
[15] R. Clark,et al. Similarity in form and function of the hippocampus in rodents, monkeys, and humans , 2013, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[16] N. Logothetis,et al. A voice region in the monkey brain , 2008, Nature Neuroscience.
[17] L. Squire,et al. Robust habit learning in the absence of awareness and independent of the medial temporal lobe , 2005, Nature.
[18] N. Logothetis,et al. A combined MRI and histology atlas of the rhesus monkey brain in stereotaxic coordinates , 2007 .
[19] S. Campanella,et al. Integrating face and voice in person perception , 2007, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[20] Andreas Kleinschmidt,et al. Interaction of Face and Voice Areas during Speaker Recognition , 2005, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[21] Dylan M. Jones,et al. Intra- and inter-modal repetition priming of familiar faces and voices. , 1997, British journal of psychology.
[22] Charles L. Wilson,et al. Characterizing interneuron and pyramidal cells in the human medial temporal lobe in vivo using extracellular recordings , 2007, Hippocampus.
[23] Bevil R. Conway,et al. Parallel, multi-stage processing of colors, faces and shapes in macaque inferior temporal cortex , 2013, Nature Neuroscience.
[24] E. Rolls,et al. Neurons in the amygdala of the monkey with responses selective for faces , 1985, Behavioural Brain Research.
[25] K M Gothard,et al. Neural responses to facial expression and face identity in the monkey amygdala. , 2007, Journal of neurophysiology.
[26] Robert R Hampton,et al. Episodic memory in nonhumans: what, and where, is when? , 2004, Current Opinion in Neurobiology.
[27] Boris Suchan,et al. Domain‐specific retrieval of source information in the medial temporal lobe , 2007, The European journal of neuroscience.
[28] Terrence R Stanford,et al. Categorization in the monkey hippocampus: a possible mechanism for encoding information into memory. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[29] L. Frank,et al. Single Neurons in the Monkey Hippocampus and Learning of New Associations , 2003, Science.
[30] Taketoshi Ono,et al. Neural Representations of Personally Familiar and Unfamiliar Faces in the Anterior Inferior Temporal Cortex of Monkeys , 2011, Neuroscience Research.
[31] D. B. Bender,et al. Visual properties of neurons in inferotemporal cortex of the Macaque. , 1972, Journal of neurophysiology.
[32] R. Desimone,et al. Visual properties of neurons in a polysensory area in superior temporal sulcus of the macaque. , 1981, Journal of neurophysiology.
[33] Doris Y. Tsao,et al. Faces and objects in macaque cerebral cortex , 2003, Nature Neuroscience.
[34] Jenny Hadfield,et al. I Recognise you but I Can't Place you: An Investigation of Familiar-only Experiences during Tests of Voice and Face Recognition , 1998 .
[35] M. W. Brown,et al. Differential neuronal encoding of novelty, familiarity and recency in regions of the anterior temporal lobe , 1998, Neuropharmacology.
[36] N. Logothetis,et al. Functional imaging of the monkey brain , 1999, Nature Neuroscience.
[37] E. Denkova,et al. Neural correlates of remembering/knowing famous people: An event-related fMRI study , 2006, Neuropsychologia.
[38] Doris Y. Tsao,et al. Functional Compartmentalization and Viewpoint Generalization Within the Macaque Face-Processing System , 2010, Science.
[39] Christof Koch,et al. Selectivity of pyramidal cells and interneurons in the human medial temporal lobe. , 2011, Journal of neurophysiology.
[40] Elizabeth A Buffalo,et al. Recognition memory signals in the macaque hippocampus , 2009, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[41] L. Romanski. Integration of faces and vocalizations in ventral prefrontal cortex: Implications for the evolution of audiovisual speech , 2012, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[42] E T Rolls,et al. Sparseness of the neuronal representation of stimuli in the primate temporal visual cortex. , 1995, Journal of neurophysiology.
[43] E. Rolls,et al. Object, space, and object-space representations in the primate hippocampus. , 2005, Journal of neurophysiology.
[44] Kenji Kawano,et al. Global and fine information coded by single neurons in the temporal visual cortex , 1999, Nature.
[45] Carmena Jose,et al. Oscillatory phase coupling coordinates anatomically-dispersed functional cell assemblies , 2011 .
[46] Charles L. Wilson,et al. Single Neuron Activity in Human Hippocampus and Amygdala during Recognition of Faces and Objects , 1997, Neuron.
[47] M. Crommelinck,et al. When audition alters vision: an event-related potential study of the cross-modal interactions between faces and voices , 2004, Neuroscience Letters.
[48] J Richard Hanley,et al. Recalling episodic and semantic information about famous faces and voices , 2007, Memory & cognition.
[49] J. Winslow,et al. Recognizing facial cues: individual discrimination by chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). , 2000, Journal of comparative psychology.
[50] R. Insausti,et al. Convergence of unimodal and polymodal sensory input to the entorhinal cortex in the fascicularis monkey , 2008, Neuroscience.
[51] A. Treves,et al. Morphing Marilyn into Maggie dissociates physical and identity face representations in the brain , 2005, Nature Neuroscience.
[52] Byron M. Yu,et al. Dimensionality reduction for large-scale neural recordings , 2014, Nature Neuroscience.
[53] R. Muller,et al. The presence of a second rat has only subtle effects on the location‐specific firing of hippocampal place cells , 2012, Hippocampus.
[54] J. Mullennix,et al. Typicality effects on memory for voice: Implications for earwitness testimony , 2011 .
[55] R. Adolphs,et al. Single-Unit Responses Selective for Whole Faces in the Human Amygdala , 2011, Current Biology.
[56] Itzhak Fried,et al. Inhibitory and excitatory responses of single neurons in the human medial temporal lobe during recognition of faces and objects. , 2002, Cerebral cortex.
[57] Laurie R Santos,et al. Primate brains in the wild: the sensory bases for social interactions , 2004, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
[58] A. J. Mistlin,et al. Neurones responsive to faces in the temporal cortex: studies of functional organization, sensitivity to identity and relation to perception. , 1984, Human neurobiology.
[59] R. Hampton,et al. Rhesus Monkeys See Who They Hear: Spontaneous Cross-Modal Memory for Familiar Conspecifics , 2011, PloS one.
[60] U. Rutishauser,et al. Activity of human hippocampal and amygdala neurons during retrieval of declarative memories , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[61] Brigitte Röder,et al. Semantic confusion regarding the development of multisensory integration: a practical solution , 2010, The European journal of neuroscience.
[62] N. Burgess,et al. The hippocampus and memory: insights from spatial processing , 2008, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
[63] E. Rolls. Neurons in the cortex of the temporal lobe and in the amygdala of the monkey with responses selective for faces. , 1984, Human neurobiology.
[64] J. Bachevalier,et al. The impact of selective amygdala, orbital frontal cortex, or hippocampal formation lesions on established social relationships in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). , 2006, Behavioral neuroscience.
[65] H Eichenbaum,et al. Thinking about brain cell assemblies. , 1993, Science.
[66] N. Logothetis,et al. Own-species bias in the representations of monkey and human face categories in the primate temporal lobe. , 2011, Journal of neurophysiology.
[67] J. Konorski. Some new ideas concerning the physiological mechanisms of perception. , 1967, Acta biologiae experimentalis.
[68] M A Meredith,et al. Engagement of visual fixation suppresses sensory responsiveness and multisensory integration in the primate superior colliculus , 2003, The European journal of neuroscience.
[69] A. Braun,et al. Toward an evolutionary perspective on conceptual representation: species-specific calls activate visual and affective processing systems in the macaque. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[70] Katsuki Nakamura,et al. Responses of single neurons in monkey amygdala to facial and vocal emotions. , 2007, Journal of neurophysiology.
[71] C. Gross,et al. Representations of faces and body parts in macaque temporal cortex: a functional MRI study. , 2005, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[72] D. Perrett,et al. Visual neurones responsive to faces in the monkey temporal cortex , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.
[73] M. Moser,et al. Understanding memory through hippocampal remapping , 2008, Trends in Neurosciences.
[74] Kathleen S. Rockland,et al. Connections between the anterior inferotemporal cortex (area TE) and CA1 of the hippocampus in monkey , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.
[75] K. Rockland,et al. Some temporal and parietal cortical connections converge in CA1 of the primate hippocampus. , 1999, Cerebral cortex.
[76] Sylvia Wirth,et al. Representation of Well-Learned Information in the Monkey Hippocampus , 2004, Neuron.
[77] A. Damasio,et al. Convergence and divergence in a neural architecture for recognition and memory , 2009, Trends in Neurosciences.
[78] T. Ono,et al. Monkey hippocampal neuron responses to complex sensory stimulation during object discrimination , 1992, Hippocampus.
[79] Yukiko Kikuchi,et al. Hierarchical Auditory Processing Directed Rostrally along the Monkey's Supratemporal Plane , 2010, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[80] A. Young,et al. Understanding face recognition. , 1986, British journal of psychology.
[81] R. Quiroga. Concept cells: the building blocks of declarative memory functions , 2012, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
[82] Rodrigo Quian Quiroga,et al. Human medial temporal lobe neurons respond preferentially to personally relevant images , 2009, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[83] B. Milner,et al. Equivalent activation of the hippocampus by face-face and face-laugh paired associate learning and recognition , 2010, Neuropsychologia.
[84] R A Johnston,et al. Understanding face recognition with an interactive activation model. , 1990, British journal of psychology.
[85] C. Koch,et al. Category-specific visual responses of single neurons in the human medial temporal lobe , 2000, Nature Neuroscience.
[86] C. Waitt,et al. Perceptual considerations in the use of colored photographic and video stimuli to study nonhuman primate behavior , 2006, American journal of primatology.
[87] Doris Y. Tsao,et al. A Cortical Region Consisting Entirely of Face-Selective Cells , 2006, Science.
[88] K. Rockland,et al. Direct projections from CA1 to the superior temporal sulcus in the monkey, revealed by single axon analysis , 2005, Brain Research.
[89] R. Johnston,et al. The role of the hippocampal system in social odor discrimination and scent-marking in female golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus). , 2000, Behavioral neuroscience.
[90] H. Eichenbaum,et al. Neural correlates of social odor recognition and the representation of individual distinctive social odors within entorhinal cortex and ventral subiculum , 2005, Neuroscience.
[91] Lance M. Optican,et al. Unix-based multiple-process system, for real-time data acquisition and control , 1982 .
[92] Bernhard Bogerts,et al. Social behaviour in rats lesioned with ibotenic acid in the hippocampus: quantitative and qualitative analysis , 1999, Psychopharmacology.
[93] Marianne Latinus,et al. Cerebral correlates and statistical criteria of cross-modal face and voice integration. , 2011, Seeing and perceiving.
[94] B L McNaughton,et al. Coordinated Reactivation of Distributed Memory Traces in Primate Neocortex , 2002, Science.
[95] E. Rolls,et al. View‐responsive neurons in the primate hippocampal complex , 1995, Hippocampus.
[96] D. Amaral,et al. Topographical and laminar distribution of cortical input to the monkey entorhinal cortex , 2007, Journal of anatomy.
[97] C. Koch,et al. Invariant visual representation by single neurons in the human brain , 2005, Nature.
[98] N. Logothetis,et al. fMRI of the Face-Processing Network in the Ventral Temporal Lobe of Awake and Anesthetized Macaques , 2011, Neuron.
[99] Keiji Tanaka,et al. Matching Categorical Object Representations in Inferior Temporal Cortex of Man and Monkey , 2008, Neuron.
[100] G. Rhodes,et al. A comparative view of face perception. , 2010, Journal of comparative psychology.
[101] M. Hasselmo,et al. The role of expression and identity in the face-selective responses of neurons in the temporal visual cortex of the monkey , 1989, Behavioural Brain Research.
[102] Conny F. Schmidt,et al. Face perception is mediated by a distributed cortical network , 2005, Brain Research Bulletin.
[103] C. Koch,et al. Sparse Representation in the Human Medial Temporal Lobe , 2006, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[104] K. Gothard,et al. Response Characteristics of Basolateral and Centromedial Neurons in the Primate Amygdala , 2010, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[105] E. Rolls,et al. Selectivity between faces in the responses of a population of neurons in the cortex in the superior temporal sulcus of the monkey , 1985, Brain Research.
[106] C. Koch,et al. Explicit Encoding of Multimodal Percepts by Single Neurons in the Human Brain , 2009, Current Biology.
[107] M. Moscovitch,et al. Memory as Social Glue: Close Interpersonal Relationships in Amnesic Patients , 2012, Front. Psychology.
[108] S. Yamane,et al. What facial features activate face neurons in the inferotemporal cortex of the monkey? , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.
[109] Norbert J. Fortin,et al. The evolution of episodic memory , 2013, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[110] T. Ono,et al. Spatial responsiveness of monkey hippocampal neurons to various visual and auditory stimuli , 1992, Hippocampus.
[111] Go Uchida,et al. Object Representation in Inferior Temporal Cortex Is Organized Hierarchically in a Mosaic-Like Structure , 2013, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[112] 靱負 正雄,et al. Connections between the medial temporal cortex and the CA1 subfield of the hippocampal formation in the Japanese monkey (macaca fuscata) , 2000 .
[113] Katalin M. Gothard,et al. How do rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) scan faces in a visual paired comparison task? , 2004, Animal Cognition.
[114] A. J. Mistlin,et al. Visual cells in the temporal cortex sensitive to face view and gaze direction , 1985, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences.
[115] A. Toga,et al. The Rhesus Monkey Brain in Stereotaxic Coordinates , 1999 .
[116] O. Pascalis,et al. Spontaneous voice–face identity matching by rhesus monkeys for familiar conspecifics and humans , 2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[117] P. Juslin,et al. Realism of confidence in earwitness versus eyewitness identification , 1998 .
[118] E. Rolls,et al. Responses of single neurons in the hippocampus of the macaque related to recognition memory , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.
[119] T. Schormann,et al. Activation Reduction in Anterior Temporal Cortices during Repeated Recognition of Faces of Personal Acquaintances , 2001, NeuroImage.
[120] M. Schwarz,et al. Domain‐specific impairment of source memory following a right posterior medial temporal lobe lesion , 2007, Hippocampus.
[121] Wen-Ming Luh,et al. Amygdala lesions disrupt modulation of functional MRI activity evoked by facial expression in the monkey inferior temporal cortex , 2012, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[122] David L. Sheinberg,et al. Stimulus selectivity and response latency in putative inhibitory and excitatory neurons of the primate inferior temporal cortex. , 2012, Journal of neurophysiology.