Tanaka Shingo, Fujita Ichiro
Laboratory for Cognitive Neuroscience, Graduate School of Frontier Biosciences, Osaka University, Osaka 565-0871, Japan, and.
Laboratory for Cognitive Neuroscience, Graduate School of Frontier Biosciences, Osaka University, Osaka 565-0871, Japan, and Center for Information and Neural Networks, Osaka University and National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Osaka 565-0871, Japan
J Neurosci. 2015 Aug 26;35(34):12033-46. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2665-14.2015.
Even when we view an object from different distances, so that the size of its projection onto the retina varies, we perceive its size to be relatively unchanged. In this perceptual phenomenon known as size constancy, the brain uses both distance and retinal image size to estimate the size of an object. Given that binocular disparity, the small positional difference between the retinal images in the two eyes, is a powerful visual cue for distance, we examined how it affects neuronal tuning to retinal image size in visual cortical area V4 of macaque monkeys. Depending on the imposed binocular disparity of a circular patch embedded in random dot stereograms, most neurons adjusted their preferred size in a manner consistent with size constancy. They preferred larger retinal image sizes when stimuli were stereoscopically presented nearer and preferred smaller retinal image sizes when stimuli were presented farther away. This disparity-dependent shift of preferred image size was not affected by the vergence angle, a cue for the fixation distance, suggesting that different V4 neurons compute object size for different fixation distances rather than that individual neurons adjust the shift based on vergence. This interpretation was supported by a simple circuit model, which could simulate the shift of preferred image size without any information about the fixation distance. We suggest that a population of V4 neurons encodes the actual size of objects, rather than simply the size of their retinal images, and that these neurons thereby contribute to size constancy.
We perceive the size of an object to be relatively stable despite changes in the size of its retinal image that accompany changes in viewing distance. This phenomenon, called size constancy, is accomplished by combining retinal image size and distance information in our brain. We demonstrate that a large population of V4 neurons changes their size tuning depending on the perceived distance of a visual stimulus derived from binocular disparity. They prefer larger or smaller retinal image sizes when stimuli are stereoscopically presented nearer or farther away, respectively. This property makes V4 neurons suitable for encoding the actual size of objects, not simply the retinal image sizes, and providing a possible mechanism for perceptual size constancy.
即使我们从不同距离观看一个物体,使其在视网膜上的投影大小发生变化,我们仍会感觉到它的大小相对不变。在这种被称为大小恒常性的感知现象中,大脑利用距离和视网膜图像大小来估计物体的大小。鉴于双眼视差(两眼视网膜图像之间的微小位置差异)是一种强大的距离视觉线索,我们研究了它如何影响猕猴视觉皮层V4区神经元对视网膜图像大小的调谐。根据随机点立体图中嵌入的圆形斑块所施加的双眼视差,大多数神经元以与大小恒常性一致的方式调整其偏好大小。当刺激在立体视觉上呈现得更近时,它们偏好更大的视网膜图像大小;当刺激呈现得更远时,它们偏好更小的视网膜图像大小。这种偏好图像大小的视差依赖性变化不受辐辏角(一种注视距离线索)的影响,这表明不同的V4神经元针对不同的注视距离计算物体大小,而不是单个神经元根据辐辏来调整这种变化。一个简单的电路模型支持了这一解释,该模型可以在没有任何关于注视距离信息的情况下模拟偏好图像大小的变化。我们认为,一群V4神经元编码物体的实际大小,而不仅仅是其视网膜图像的大小,并且这些神经元因此有助于大小恒常性。
尽管随着观看距离的变化,物体在视网膜上的图像大小会发生改变,但我们仍会感觉到物体的大小相对稳定。这种现象被称为大小恒常性,是通过在大脑中结合视网膜图像大小和距离信息来实现的。我们证明,大量的V4神经元会根据从双眼视差得出的视觉刺激的感知距离来改变其大小调谐。当刺激在立体视觉上呈现得更近或更远时,它们分别偏好更大或更小的视网膜图像大小。这种特性使V4神经元适合于编码物体的实际大小,而不仅仅是视网膜图像大小,并为感知大小恒常性提供了一种可能的机制。