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Dive into the research topics where Natalie Caspari is active.

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Featured researches published by Natalie Caspari.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2015

Covert Shifts of Spatial Attention in the Macaque Monkey

Natalie Caspari; Thomas Janssens; Dante Mantini; Rik Vandenberghe; Wim Vanduffel

In the awake state, shifts of spatial attention alternate with periods of sustained attention at a fixed location or object. Human fMRI experiments revealed the critical role of the superior parietal lobule (SPL) in shifting spatial attention, a finding not predicted by human lesion studies and monkey electrophysiology. To investigate whether a potential homolog of the human SPL shifting region exists in monkeys (Macaca mulatta), we adopted an event-related fMRI paradigm that closely resembled a human experiment (Molenberghs et al., 2007). In this paradigm, a pair of relevant and irrelevant shapes was continuously present on the horizontal meridian. Subjects had to covertly detect a dimming of the relevant shape while ignoring the irrelevant dimmings. The events of interest consisted of the replacement of one stimulus pair by the next. During shift but not stay events, the relevant shape of the new pair appeared at the contralateral position relative to the previous one. Spatial shifting events activated parietal areas V6/V6A and medial intraparietal area, caudo-dorsal visual areas, the most posterior portion of the superior temporal sulcus, and several smaller frontal areas. These areas were not activated during passive stimulation with the same sensory stimuli. During stay events, strong direction-sensitive attention signals were observed in a distributed set of contralateral visual, temporal, parietal, and lateral prefrontal areas, the vast majority overlapping with the sensory stimulus representation. We suggest medial intraparietal area and V6/V6A as functional counterparts of human SPL because they contained the most widespread shift signals in the absence of contralateral stay activity, resembling the functional characteristics of the human SPL shifting area.


NeuroImage | 2014

Fine-grained stimulus representations in body selective areas of human occipito-temporal cortex.

Natalie Caspari; Ivo D. Popivanov; Patrick De Mazière; Wim Vanduffel; Rufin Vogels; Guy A. Orban; Jan Jastorff

Neurophysiological and functional imaging studies have investigated the representation of animate and inanimate stimulus classes in monkey inferior temporal (IT) and human occipito-temporal cortex (OTC). These studies proposed a distributed representation of stimulus categories across IT and OTC and at the same time highlighted category specific modules for the processing of bodies, faces and objects. Here, we investigated whether the stimulus representation within the extrastriate (EBA) and the fusiform (FBA) body areas differed from the representation across OTC. To address this question, we performed an event-related fMRI experiment, evaluating the pattern of activation elicited by 200 individual stimuli that had already been extensively tested in our earlier monkey imaging and single cell studies (Popivanov et al., 2012, 2014). The set contained achromatic images of headless monkey and human bodies, two sets of man-made objects, monkey and human faces, four-legged mammals, birds, fruits, and sculptures. The fMRI response patterns within EBA and FBA primarily distinguished bodies from non-body stimuli, with subtle differences between the areas. However, despite responding on average stronger to bodies than to other categories, classification performance for preferred and non-preferred categories was comparable. OTC primarily distinguished animate from inanimate stimuli. However, cluster analysis revealed a much more fine-grained representation with several homogeneous clusters consisting entirely of stimuli of individual categories. Overall, our data suggest that category representation varies with location within OTC. Nevertheless, body modules contain information to discriminate also non-preferred stimuli and show an increasing specificity in a posterior to anterior gradient.


Cerebral Cortex | 2013

Spatial Stimulus Configuration and Attentional Selection: Extrastriate and Superior Parietal Interactions

Céline R. Gillebert; Natalie Caspari; Johan Wagemans; Ronald Peeters; Patrick Dupont; Rik Vandenberghe

The intraparietal sulcus (IPS) is critical for resolving stimulus competition. Its activity is modulated depending on how competing stimuli are spatially configured. Lesions extending into IPS lead to selection deficits when stimuli are configured along a horizontal relative to a vertical or diagonal axis. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we examined whether the effect of configuration axis originates at the level of the sensory map in early visual cortex or at the level of the attentional priority map in IPS. In each trial, we presented 1 or 2 peripheral gratings in the upper right visual field and a central letter stream. Subjects performed either a peripheral orientation discrimination task or a central letter detection task. Left IPS activity was higher when peripheral stimuli were configured along the horizontal relative to the vertical axis, but only in peripheral attention conditions. The portions of extrastriate cortex that responded to the peripheral stimuli showed a similar interaction. Connectivity from superior parietal to extrastriate cortex was enhanced by adding a competing distracter during the peripheral attention task. The effect of the spatial configuration between competing stimuli originates at the level of the attentional priority map in IPS rather than the visual sensory map.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2017

Attention Shifts Recruit the Monkey Default Mode Network

John Arsenault; Natalie Caspari; Rik Vandenberghe; Wim Vanduffel

A unifying function associated with the default mode network (DMN), which is more active during rest than under active task conditions, has been difficult to define. The DMN is activated during monitoring the external world for unexpected events, as a sentinel, and when humans are engaged in high-level internally focused tasks. The existence of DMN correlates in other species, such as mice, challenge the idea that internally focused, high-level cognitive operations, such as introspection, autobiographical memory retrieval, planning the future, and predicting someone elses thoughts, are evolutionarily preserved defining properties of the DMN. A recent human study demonstrated that demanding cognitive shifts could recruit the DMN, yet it is unknown whether this holds for nonhuman species. Therefore, we tested whether large changes in cognitive context would recruit DMN regions in female and male nonhuman primates. Such changes were measured as displacements of spatial attentional weights based on internal rules of relevance (spatial shifts) compared with maintaining attentional weights at the same location (stay events). Using fMRI in macaques, we detected that a cortical network, activated during shifts, largely overlapped with the DMN. Moreover, fMRI time courses sampled from independently defined DMN foci showed significant shift selectivity during the demanding attention task. Finally, functional clustering based on independent resting state data revealed that DMN and shift regions clustered conjointly, whereas regions activated during the stay events clustered apart. We therefore propose that cognitive shifting in primates generally recruits DMN regions. This might explain a breakdown of the DMN in many neurological diseases characterized by declined cognitive flexibility. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Activation of the human default mode network (DMN) can be measured with fMRI when subjects shift thoughts between high-level internally directed cognitive states, when thinking about the self, the perspective of others, when imagining future and past events, and during mind wandering. Furthermore, the DMN is activated as a sentinel, monitoring the environment for unexpected events. Arguably, these cognitive processes have in common fast and substantial changes in cognitive context. As DMN activity has also been reported in nonhuman species, we tested whether shifts in spatial attention activated the monkey DMN. Core monkey DMN and shift-selective regions shared several functional properties, indicating that cognitive shifting, in general, might constitute one of the evolutionarily preserved functions of the DMN.


Cerebral Cortex | 2017

Functional Similarity of Medial Superior Parietal Areas for Shift-Selective Attention Signals in Humans and Monkeys

Natalie Caspari; John Arsenault; Rik Vandenberghe; Wim Vanduffel


Archive | 2016

Task based functional homologies of human superior parietal lobe in monkey

Natalie Caspari; Rik Vandenberghe; Wim Vanduffel


Archive | 2015

DMN function, attention shifting and attention holding compared across humans and monkeys

Natalie Caspari; Rik Vandenberghe; Wim Vanduffel


Archive | 2015

Intraparietal Area on Visual and Memory Saccades Effect of Reversible Inactivation of Macaque Lateral

Pietro Mazzoni; Eric A. Yttri; Yuqing Liu; Lawrence H. Snyder; Michael Koval; R. Matthew Hutchison; Stephen G. Lomber; Stefan Everling; Satoshi Nishida; Tomohiro Tanaka; Tadashi Ogawa; Natalie Caspari; Thomas Janssens; Dante Mantini; Rik Vandenberghe; Wim Vanduffel


Archive | 2015

Programming in Macaque Frontal Eye Field Dissociation of Visual Discrimination From Saccade

Narcisse P. Bichot; Jeffrey D. Schall; Hugo L. Fernandes; Ian H. Stevenson; Adam N. Phillips; Mark A. Segraves; Nicholas E. DiQuattro; Risa Sawaki; Joy J. Geng; H. Snyder; Steve W. C. Chang; Jeffrey L. Calton; Bonnie M. Lawrence; Anthony R. Dickinson; Natalie Caspari; Thomas Janssens; Dante Mantini; Rik Vandenberghe; Wim Vanduffel


Archive | 2014

A cognitive function of the default mode network in monkeys: Shifting of selective attention?

Natalie Caspari; Rik Vandenberghe; Wim Vanduffel

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Dive into the Natalie Caspari's collaboration.

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Wim Vanduffel

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Rik Vandenberghe

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Dante Mantini

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Ivo D. Popivanov

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Jan Jastorff

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Rufin Vogels

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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John Arsenault

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Céline R. Gillebert

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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