Literature DB >> 22442570

Human neural responses involved in spatial pooling of locally ambiguous motion signals.

Kaoru Amano1, Tsunehiro Takeda, Tomoki Haji, Masahiko Terao, Kazushi Maruya, Kenji Matsumoto, Ikuya Murakami, Shin'ya Nishida.   

Abstract

Early visual motion signals are local and one-dimensional (1-D). For specification of global two-dimensional (2-D) motion vectors, the visual system should appropriately integrate these signals across orientation and space. Previous neurophysiological studies have suggested that this integration process consists of two computational steps (estimation of local 2-D motion vectors, followed by their spatial pooling), both being identified in the area MT. Psychophysical findings, however, suggest that under certain stimulus conditions, the human visual system can also compute mathematically correct global motion vectors from direct pooling of spatially distributed 1-D motion signals. To study the neural mechanisms responsible for this novel 1-D motion pooling, we conducted human magnetoencephalography (MEG) and functional MRI experiments using a global motion stimulus comprising multiple moving Gabors (global-Gabor motion). In the first experiment, we measured MEG and blood oxygen level-dependent responses while changing motion coherence of global-Gabor motion. In the second experiment, we investigated cortical responses correlated with direction-selective adaptation to the global 2-D motion, not to local 1-D motions. We found that human MT complex (hMT+) responses show both coherence dependency and direction selectivity to global motion based on 1-D pooling. The results provide the first evidence that hMT+ is the locus of 1-D motion pooling, as well as that of conventional 2-D motion pooling.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22442570     DOI: 10.1152/jn.00821.2011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0022-3077            Impact factor:   2.714


  6 in total

1.  Temporal and spatial limits of pattern motion sensitivity in macaque MT neurons.

Authors:  Romesh D Kumbhani; Yasmine El-Shamayleh; J Anthony Movshon
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2014-12-24       Impact factor: 2.714

2.  The development of perceptual averaging: learning what to do, not just how to do it.

Authors:  Pete R Jones; Tessa M Dekker
Journal:  Dev Sci       Date:  2017-08-15

3.  Scene Regularity Interacts With Individual Biases to Modulate Perceptual Stability.

Authors:  Qinglin Li; Andrew Isaac Meso; Nikos K Logothetis; Georgios A Keliris
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2019-05-28       Impact factor: 4.677

4.  Local biases drive, but do not determine, the perception of illusory trajectories.

Authors:  Tamara N Gheorghes; Paul Richardson; John Reidy
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-05-08       Impact factor: 4.379

5.  Visual motion integration is mediated by directional ambiguities in local motion signals.

Authors:  Francesca Rocchi; Tim Ledgeway; Ben S Webb
Journal:  Front Comput Neurosci       Date:  2013-11-18       Impact factor: 2.380

6.  Neural Correlates of the Time Marker for the Perception of Event Timing.

Authors:  Kaoru Amano; Liang Qi; Yoshikazu Terada; Shin'ya Nishida
Journal:  eNeuro       Date:  2016-09-21
  6 in total

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