National Institute for Physiological Sciences Takemura Lab Sensory & Cognitive Brain Mapping
National Institutes of Natural Sciences National Institute for Physiological SciencesNational Institutes of Natural Sciences National Institute for Physiological Sciences

Seminars

Open

Takemura Lab Seminar: Kalanit Grill-Spector (Stanford University, USA)

Date and Time

October 16th, 2025 (Thu), 10:30-11:30

Format

Onsite only

Venue

Seminar Room A/B, 1st floor, National Institute for Physiological Sciences

Co-Host

Frontiers of Life Sciences [Spin-L]

Language

English

Speaker

Kalanit Grill-Spector

Professor, Department of Psychology and Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute, Stanford University, USA

Title and Abstract

Title: Understanding cognitive processing in the human visual system using spatiotemporal population receptive fields


Abstract: A key goal of cognitive neuroscience is to generate an understanding of the functional neuroanatomy of cortical systems. fMRI and computational modeling have transformed our understanding of the human brain. In the visual system, modeling population receptive fields (pRF) led to discoveries of multiple maps of pRF eccentricity, polar angle, and size as well as explained cognitive phenomena like spatial attention and the face inversion effect. However, due to the low temporal resolution of fMRI and the low spatial resolution of EEG/MEG it is unknown what is the nature of spatiotemporal computations in the human brain.

Using computational encoding models and the visual system as a model system, I will describe recent empirical and computational innovations that have advanced understanding of key cognitive neuroscience questions. Specifically, I will describe a new empirical and computational framework for estimating from fMRI data the spatiotemporal population receptive field (ST-pRF) of each voxel in the visual system in units of visual degrees and milliseconds. I will start by showing how we tested and validated the ST-pRF framework vs. ground truth data. Then, we use this framework to elucidate the spatiotemporal computations across the human visual system for the first time, finding that spatial and temporal windows as well as compressive nonlinearities increase systematically across the visual hierarchy. With this understanding in hand, we then assess how simple, bottom-up computations by ST-pRFs may affect visual capacity and explain elusive phenomena like why neural responses are suppressed when multiple visual stimuli are presented at once compared to one after the other in sequence. I will end by discussing the relevance of this powerful spatiotemporal pRF framework for understanding other sensory and cognitive systems in the brain.