| Literature DB >> 14700259 |
Mervi Könönen1, Ari Pääkkönen, Maija Pihlajamäki, Kaarina Partanen, Pasi A Karjalainen, Seppo Soimakallio, Hannu J Aronen.
Abstract
Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to determine the brain areas that process coherent motion. To reduce the activity related to eye-movement planning and self-motion perception, rotation was used as coherent motion and the stimulus was restricted to the central visual field. Coherent rotation relative to incoherent random-dot motion resulted in consistent activation in the superior parietal lobule (SPL), in the lateral occipital gyrus (presumptive kinetic occipital region, KO), and in the fusiform gyrus (FG). The main novel finding in present study is the bilateral SPL activation, which has not been found in any previous study contrasting coherent and incoherent motion. It is suggested that the SPL activation is related to form-from-motion processing. The stimulus modification that prevented abrupt appearances of dots at the borders of the stimulus field increased the strength of rolling disk-like percept of the coherent stimulus. This perception of form may also be at least partly responsible for the activation in KO and FG. With this explanation, our three consistent activation areas are in line with previous findings. Furthermore, these results demonstrate that even delicate changes in some stimulus aspects can lead to significant changes in the activation of the brain.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 14700259 DOI: 10.1068/p3427
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perception ISSN: 0301-0066 Impact factor: 1.490