Dynamics of visual object coding within and across the hemispheres: Objects in the periphery

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Abstract

The human brain continuously integrates information across its two hemispheres to construct a coherent representation of the perceptual world. Characterising how visual information is represented in each hemisphere over time is crucial for understanding how hemispheric transfer contributes to perception. Here, we investigated information processing within each hemisphere over time and the degree to which it is distinct or duplicated across hemispheres. We presented participants with object images lateralised to the left or right visual fields while measuring their brain activity with electroencephalography (EEG). Stimulus coding was more robust and emerged earlier in the contralateral than the ipsilateral hemisphere. Presentation of two stimuli, one to each hemifield, reduced the fidelity of representations in both hemispheres relative to one stimulus alone, signifying hemispheric interference. Finally, we found that processing within the contralateral, but not ipsilateral, hemisphere was biased to image-related over concept-related information. Together, these results suggest that hemispheric transfer operates to filter irrelevant information and efficiently prioritise processing of meaning.

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