TY - JOUR T1 - Category-selective human brain processes elicited in fast periodic visual stimulation streams are immune to temporal predictability JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/117135 SP - 117135 AU - Genevieve L. Quek AU - Bruno Rossion Y1 - 2017/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/03/15/117135.abstract N2 - Recording direct neural activity when periodically inserting exemplars of a particular category in a rapid visual stream of other objects offers an objective and efficient way to quantify perceptual categorization and characterize its spatiotemporal dynamics. However, since periodicity entails predictability, perceptual categorization processes identified within this framework may be partly generated or modulated by temporal expectations. Here we present a stringent test of the hypothesis that temporal predictability generates or modulates category-selective neural processes. In Experiment 1, we compare neurophysiological responses to periodic and nonperiodic (i.e., unpredictable) variable face stimuli in a fast (12 Hz) visual stream of nonface objects. In Experiment 2, we assess potential responses to rare (10%) omissions of periodic face events (i.e., violations of periodicity) in the same fast visual stream. Overall, our observations indicate that long duration category(face)-selective processes elicited in a fast periodic stream of visual objects are immune to temporal predictability. These observations do not support a predictive coding framework interpretation of category-change detection in the human brain and have important implications for understanding human perceptual categorization in a rapidly changing (i.e., dynamic) visual scene. ER -