Abstract
In everyday life, humans must parse visual stimuli with highly variable amounts of perceptual experience, ranging from incredibly familiar to entirely new. Even when choosing a novel to buy at a bookstore, one is exposed to covers they have seen numerous times intermixed with recently released titles. Visual exposure to stimuli is known to have distinct neural correlates in the lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC) of nonhuman primates. However, it is currently unknown if this function may be localized to specific subregions within the LPFC. Specifically, we aimed to determine whether the posterior fundus of area 46 (p46f), an area that responds to deviations from a learned sequence, also responds to less frequently presented stimuli outside of the sequential context. We compare responses in p46f to the adjacent subregion, posterior ventral area 46 (p46v), which we propose may be more likely to show exposure-dependent responses due to its proximity to known novelty responsive regions. To test whether p46f or p46v represent perceptual exposure, we performed awake functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) on three male monkeys as they observed visual stimuli that varied in their number of daily presentations. Here we show that p46v, but not p46f, shows preferential activation to stimuli with low perceptual exposure, which further localizes exposure-dependent effects in monkey LPFC. These results align with previous research that has found novelty responses in ventral LPFC and are consistent with the designation of p46f as having a sequence-specific function. Further, they expand on our knowledge of the specific role of LPFC subregions and localize perceptual exposure processing within this broader brain region.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.