Author:
GEISLER WILSON S.,ALBRECHT DUANE G.,CRANE ALISON M.,STERN LAWRENCE
Abstract
When an image feature moves with sufficient speed it should
become smeared across space, due to temporal integration in
the visual system, effectively creating a spatial motion pattern
that is oriented in the direction of the motion. Recent
psychophysical evidence shows that such “motion streak
signals” exist in the human visual system. In this study,
we report neurophysiological evidence that these motion streak
signals also exist in the primary visual cortex of cat and monkey.
Single neuron responses were recorded for two kinds of moving
stimuli: single spots presented at different velocities and
drifting plaid patterns presented at different spatial and temporal
frequencies. Measurements were made for motion perpendicular
to the spatial orientation of the receptive field
(“perpendicular motion”) and for motion parallel
to the spatial orientation of the receptive field (“parallel
motion”). For moving spot stimuli, as the speed increases,
the ratio of the responses to parallel versus
perpendicular motion increases, and above some critical speed,
the response to parallel motion exceeds the response to
perpendicular motion. For moving plaid patterns, the average
temporal tuning function is approximately the same for both
parallel motion and perpendicular motion; in contrast, the spatial
tuning function is quite different for parallel motion and
perpendicular motion (band pass for the former and low pass
for the latter). In general, the responses to spots and plaids
are consistent with the conventional model of cortical neurons
with one rather surprising exception: Many cortical neurons
appear to be direction selective for parallel motion. We propose
a simple explanation for “parallel motion direction
selectivity” and discuss its implications for the motion
streak hypothesis. Taken as a whole, we find that the measured
response properties of cortical neurons to moving spot and plaid
patterns agree with the recent psychophysics and support the
hypothesis that motion streak signals are present in V1.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
102 articles.
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