Distinct Cortical Networks Subserve Spatio-temporal Sampling in Vision through Different Oscillatory Rhythms

Author:

Ronconi Luca12ORCID,Balestrieri Elio34,Baldauf Daniel5,Melcher David65

Affiliation:

1. Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy

2. IRCCS San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Milan, Italy

3. University of Münster, Germany

4. Otto Creutzfeld Center for Cognitive and Behavioural Neuroscience, Münster, Germany

5. University of Trento, Rovereto, Italy

6. New York University Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

Abstract

Abstract Although visual input arrives continuously, sensory information is segmented into (quasi-)discrete events. Here, we investigated the neural correlates of spatiotemporal binding in humans with magnetoencephalography using 2 tasks where separate flashes were presented on each trial but were perceived, in a bistable way, as either a single or two separate events. The first task (two-flash fusion) involved judging one versus 2 flashes, whereas the second task (apparent motion: AM) involved judging coherent motion versus two stationary flashes. Results indicate two different functional networks underlying 2 unique aspects of temporal binding. In two-flash fusion trials, involving an integration window of ∼50 msec, evoked responses differed as a function of perceptual interpretation by ∼25 msec after stimuli offset. Multivariate decoding of subjective perception based on prestimulus oscillatory phase was significant for alpha-band activity in the right medial temporal (V5/MT) area, with the strength of prestimulus connectivity between early visual areas and V5/MT being predictive of performance. In contrast, the longer integration window (∼130 msec) for AM showed evoked field differences only ∼250 msec after stimuli offset. Phase decoding of the perceptual outcome in AM trials was significant for theta-band activity in the right intraparietal sulcus. Prestimulus theta-band connectivity between V5/MT and intraparietal sulcus best predicted AM perceptual outcome. For both tasks, phase effects found could not be accounted by concomitant variations in power. These results show a strong relationship between specific spatiotemporal binding windows and specific oscillations, linked to the information flow between different areas of the “where” and “when” visual pathways.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

Publisher

MIT Press

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience

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