Author:
BARRACLOUGH NICK,TINSLEY CHRIS,WEBB BEN,VINCENT CHRIS,DERRINGTON ANDREW
Abstract
We measured the responses of single neurons in marmoset visual cortex
(V1, V2, and the third visual complex) to moving first-order stimuli and
to combined first- and second-order stimuli in order to determine whether
first-order motion processing was influenced by second-order motion. Beat
stimuli were made by summing two gratings of similar spatial frequency,
one of which was static and the other was moving. The beat is the product
of a moving sinusoidal carrier (first-order motion) and a moving
low-frequency contrast envelope (second-order motion). We compared
responses to moving first-order gratings alone with responses to beat
patterns with first-order and second-order motion in the same direction as
each other, or in opposite directions to each other in order to
distinguish first-order and second-order direction-selective responses. In
the majority (72%, 67/93) of cells (V1 73%, 45/62; V2 70%,
16/23; third visual complex 75%, 6/8), responses to first-order
motion were significantly influenced by the addition of a second-order
signal. The second-order envelope was more influential when moving in the
opposite direction to the first-order stimulus, reducing first-order
direction sensitivity in V1, V2, and the third visual complex. We
interpret these results as showing that first-order motion processing
through early visual cortex is not separate from second-order motion
processing; suggesting that both motion signals are processed by the same
system.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
13 articles.
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