Neural correlates underlying local and global processing during visual search across adulthood
Gaelle Doucet, Jordanna A. Kruse, Noah Hamlin, Carole Peyrin, Nicolas Poirel

TL;DR
This study explores how the brain processes local and global visual features in younger and older adults, revealing age-related changes in brain activity during complex visual tasks.
Contribution
The study identifies age-related differences in neural correlates of local and global visual processing, particularly in the salience network and occipital cortex.
Findings
Older adults were slower to detect local targets, especially in the presence of distractors.
Local processing recruited the anterior insula and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, part of the salience network.
Older participants showed reduced occipital cortex activation compared to younger ones in complex conditions.
Abstract
Visual processing relies on the identification of both local and global features of visual stimuli. While well investigated at the behavioral level, the underlying brain mechanisms are less clear, especially in the context of aging. Using fMRI, we aimed to investigate the neural correlates underlying local and global processing in early and late adulthood. We recruited 77 healthy adults aged 19–77 who completed a visual search task based on 2-level hierarchical stimuli made of squares and/or circles. Participants were instructed to detect a target (a square) at either a local (small) or global (large) level of a hierarchical geometrical form, in the presence or absence of other hierarchical geometrical forms (distractors). At the behavioral level, we revealed high accuracy for all participants, but older participants were slower to detect local targets, specifically in presence of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVisual perception and processing mechanisms · Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies · Face Recognition and Perception
