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Dive into the research topics where Katrien Denys is active.

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Featured researches published by Katrien Denys.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

The Processing of Visual Shape in the Cerebral Cortex of Human and Nonhuman Primates: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study

Katrien Denys; Wim Vanduffel; Denis Fize; Koen Nelissen; H Peuskens; David C. Van Essen; Guy A. Orban

We compared neural substrates of two-dimensional shape processing in human and nonhuman primates using functional magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in awake subjects. The comparison of MR activity evoked by viewing intact and scrambled images of objects revealed shape-sensitive regions in occipital, temporal, and parietal cortex of both humans and macaques. Intraparietal cortex in monkeys was relatively more two-dimensional shape sensitive than that of humans. In both species, there was an interaction between scrambling and type of stimuli (grayscale images and drawings), but the effect of stimulus type was much stronger in monkeys than in humans. Shape- and motion-sensitive regions overlapped to some degree. However, this overlap was much more marked in humans than in monkeys. The shape-sensitive regions can be used to constrain the warping of monkey to human cortex and suggest a large expansion of lateral parietal and superior temporal cortex in humans compared with monkeys.


Neuropsychologia | 2003

Similarities and differences in motion processing between the human and macaque brain: evidence from fMRI.

Guy A. Orban; Denis Fize; H Peuskens; Katrien Denys; Koen Nelissen; Stefan Sunaert; James T. Todd; Wim Vanduffel

The present report reviews a series of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) activation studies conducted in parallel in awake monkeys and humans using the same motion stimuli in both species. These studies reveal that motion stimuli engage largely similar cortical regions in the two species. These common regions include MT/V5 and its satellites, of which FST contributes more to the human motion complex than is generally assumed in human imaging. These results also establish a direct link between selectivity of MT/V5 neurons for speed gradients and functional activation of human MT/V5 by three-dimensional (3D) structure from motion stimuli. On the other hand, striking functional differences also emerged: in humans V3A and several regions in the intraparietal sulcus (IPS) are much more motion sensitive than their simian counterparts.


Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 2004

Visual Activation in Prefrontal Cortex is Stronger in Monkeys than in Humans

Katrien Denys; Wim Vanduffel; Denis Fize; Koen Nelissen; Hiromasa Sawamura; Svetlana Georgieva; Rufin Vogels; David C. Van Essen; Guy A. Orban

The prefrontal cortex supports many cognitive abilities, which humans share to some degree with monkeys. The specialized functions of the prefrontal cortex depend both on the nature of its inputs from other brain regions and on distinctive aspects of local processing. We used functional MRI to compare prefrontal activity between monkey and human subjects when they viewed identical images of objects, either intact or scrambled. Visual object-related activation of the lateral prefrontal cortex was observed in both species, but was stronger in monkeys than in humans, both in magnitude (factors 23) and in spatial extent (fivefold or more as a percentage of prefrontal volume). This difference was observed for two different stimulus sets, at two field strengths, and over a range of tasks. These results suggest that there may be more volitional control over visual processing in humans than in monkeys.


Science | 2002

Extracting 3D from Motion: Differences in Human and Monkey Intraparietal Cortex

Wim Vanduffel; Denis Fize; H Peuskens; Katrien Denys; Stefan Sunaert; James T. Todd; Guy A. Orban


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2003

The retinotopic organization of primate dorsal V4 and surrounding areas: A functional magnetic resonance imaging study in awake monkeys

Denis Fize; Wim Vanduffel; Koen Nelissen; Katrien Denys; Christophe Chef d'Hotel; Olivier Faugeras; Guy Orban


Archive | 2002

The lateral occipital complex in the monkey and the human

Katrien Denys; Wim Vanduffel; Denis Fize; H Peuskens; Koen Nelissen; Rik Vandenberghe; Guy Orban


Journal of Vision | 2010

fMRI correlates of isoluminant motion perception

Delwin T. Lindsey; Katrien Denys; Angela M. Brown; Guy A. Orban


Archive | 2002

Retinotopic mapping of visual cortex in awake monkeys

Denis Fize; Wim Vanduffel; Koen Nelissen; Katrien Denys; W. Van Beerendonk; Guy Orban


Archive | 2002

Can segmentation be distinguished from shape or complex contour processing

Wim Vanduffel; Katrien Denys; Denis Fize; Koen Nelissen; Guy Orban


Journal of Vision | 2010

Processing 3-dimensional structure from motion in humans and macaques

Wim Vanduffel; Denis Fize; H Peuskens; Katrien Denys; Stefan Sunaert; James T. Todd; Guy A. Orban

Collaboration


Dive into the Katrien Denys's collaboration.

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Wim Vanduffel

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Denis Fize

University of Toulouse

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Koen Nelissen

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Guy Orban

Université catholique de Louvain

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H Peuskens

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Stefan Sunaert

The Catholic University of America

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Christophe Chef d'Hotel

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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David C. Van Essen

Washington University in St. Louis

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