Author:
O'KEEFE LAWRENCE P.,MOVSHON J. ANTHONY
Abstract
Extrastriate cortical area MT is thought to process
behaviorally important visual motion signals. Psychophysical
studies suggest that visual motion signals may be analyzed
by multiple mechanisms, a “first-order” one
based on luminance, and a “second-order” one
based upon higher level cues (e.g. contrast, flicker).
Second-order motion is visible to human observers, but
should be invisible to first-order motion sensors. To learn
if area MT is involved in the analysis of second-order
motion, we measured responses to first- and second-order
gratings of single neurons in area MT (and in one experiment,
in area V1) in anesthetized, paralyzed macaque monkeys.
For each neuron, we measured directional and spatio-temporal
tuning with conventional first-order gratings and with
second-order gratings created by spatial modulation of
the flicker rate of a random texture. A minority of MT
and V1 neurons exhibited significant selectivity for direction
or orientation of second-order gratings. In nearly all
cells, response to second-order motion was weaker than
response to first-order motion. MT cells with significant
selectivity for second-order motion tended to be more responsive
and more sensitive to luminance contrast, but were in other
respects similar to the remaining MT neurons; they did
not appear to represent a distinct subpopulation. For those
cells selective for second-order motion, we found a correlation
between the preferred directions of first- and second-order
motion, and weak correlations in preferred spatial frequency.
These cells preferred lower temporal frequencies for second-order
motion than for first-order motion. A small proportion
of MT cells seemed to remain selective and responsive for
second-order motion. None of our small sample of V1 cells
did. Cells in this small population, but not others, may
perform “form-cue invariant” motion processing
(Albright, 1992).
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
140 articles.
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