Perceptual Experience of Visual Motion Activates hMT+ Independently From the Physical Reality: fMRI Insights From the Looming Pinna Figure

Author:

Budnik U.1,Hindi-Attar C.2,Hamburger K.3,Pinna B.4,Hennig J.5,Speck O.6

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Psychology and Neurosciences, Maastricht University, Netherlands

2. Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Charité Campus Mitte, Charité—Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Germany

3. Experimental Psychology and Cognitive Science, University Giessen, Germany

4. Facoltà di Lingue e Letterature Straniere, Università di Sassari, Italy

5. Medical Physics, Department of Diagnostic Radiology, University Hospital Freiburg, Germany

6. Biomedical Magnetic Resonance, Otto-von-Guericke University, Magdeburg, Germany

Abstract

The human motion processing area, hMT+, has been labeled the critical neural area for processing of real and illusory visual motion in radial 2D patterns. However, the activation in hMT+ during perception of illusory rotation in the looming double-circular Pinna Figure (PF) generated in 3D space has not been observed yet. To do so, an optic-flow like motion of rings (looming) in PF was generated on a computer screen. A psychophysically precise nulling procedure allowed quantifying the individual amount of the perceived illusory rotation in PF (PI) for each participant. The interpolation of the individual illusory motion parameters created a subjectively non-rotating PF and a physically rotating control stimulus of identical rotary strength as the PI. The physically rotating control was a double-circular figure which diverged from PF only in its arrangement of luminance gradients. In a 3-Tesla scanner, participants were presented with a random order of rotating and non-rotating figures (illusory, real, no rotation, and nulled PI). Both types, illusory and real rotation, when equal in perceptual strength for the observer, were found to be processed by hMT+.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Sensory Systems,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Ophthalmology

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