Department of Systems Medicine, University of Rome "Tor Vergata" Rome, Italy ; Centre of Space Bio-medicine, University of Rome "Tor Vergata" Rome, Italy ; Laboratory of Neuromotor Physiology, IRCCS Santa Lucia Foundation Rome, Italy.
Department of Systems Medicine, University of Rome "Tor Vergata" Rome, Italy ; Centre of Space Bio-medicine, University of Rome "Tor Vergata" Rome, Italy.
Front Integr Neurosci. 2015 Feb 23;9:13. doi: 10.3389/fnint.2015.00013. eCollection 2015.
A remarkable challenge our brain must face constantly when interacting with the environment is represented by ambiguous and, at times, even missing sensory information. This is particularly compelling for visual information, being the main sensory system we rely upon to gather cues about the external world. It is not uncommon, for example, that objects catching our attention may disappear temporarily from view, occluded by visual obstacles in the foreground. Nevertheless, we are often able to keep our gaze on them throughout the occlusion or even catch them on the fly in the face of the transient lack of visual motion information. This implies that the brain can fill the gaps of missing sensory information by extrapolating the object motion through the occlusion. In recent years, much experimental evidence has been accumulated that both perceptual and motor processes exploit visual motion extrapolation mechanisms. Moreover, neurophysiological and neuroimaging studies have identified brain regions potentially involved in the predictive representation of the occluded target motion. Within this framework, ocular pursuit and manual interceptive behavior have proven to be useful experimental models for investigating visual extrapolation mechanisms. Studies in these fields have pointed out that visual motion extrapolation processes depend on manifold information related to short-term memory representations of the target motion before the occlusion, as well as to longer term representations derived from previous experience with the environment. We will review recent oculomotor and manual interception literature to provide up-to-date views on the neurophysiological underpinnings of visual motion extrapolation.
当大脑与环境相互作用时,必须不断面对一个显著的挑战,即模糊甚至有时缺失的感觉信息。对于视觉信息来说,这一点尤为突出,因为视觉是我们依赖的主要感觉系统,用于收集关于外部世界的线索。例如,我们注意到的物体可能会暂时从视野中消失,被前景中的视觉障碍物遮挡,这种情况并不罕见。然而,我们经常能够在遮挡物期间保持对它们的注视,甚至在面对短暂的视觉运动信息缺失时,也能捕捉到它们。这意味着大脑可以通过推断遮挡物后面的物体运动来填补缺失感觉信息的空白。近年来,大量的实验证据表明,知觉和运动过程都利用了视觉运动外推机制。此外,神经生理学和神经影像学研究已经确定了大脑中可能涉及遮挡目标运动预测表示的区域。在这个框架内,眼追踪和手动拦截行为已被证明是研究视觉外推机制的有用实验模型。这些领域的研究指出,视觉运动外推过程取决于与遮挡前目标运动的短期记忆表示以及与环境先前经验相关的长期表示相关的多种信息。我们将回顾最近的眼动和手动拦截文献,提供关于视觉运动外推的神经生理学基础的最新观点。