Author:
VAINA LUCIA M.,MAKRIS NIKOS,KENNEDY DAVID,COWEY ALAN
Abstract
First-order (Fourier) motion consists of stable
spatiotemporal luminance variations. Second-order (non-Fourier)
motion consists instead of spatiotemporal modulation of
contrast, flicker, or spatial frequency. In spite of extensive
psychophysical and computational analysis of the nature
and relationship of these two types of motion, it remains
unclear whether they are detected by the same mechanism
or whether separate mechanisms are involved. Here we report
the selective impairment of first-order motion, on a range
of local and global motion tasks, in the contralateral
visual hemifield of a patient with unilateral brain damage
centered on putative visual areas V2 and V3 in the medial
part of the occipital lobe. His perception of second-order
motion was unimpaired. As his disorder is the obverse of
that reported after damage in the vicinity of human visual
area MT (V5), the results support models of motion processing
in which first- and second-order motion are, at least in
part, computed separately at the extrastriate cortical
level.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
88 articles.
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