Furlan Michele, Smith Andrew T
Department of Psychology, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham TW20 0EX, United Kingdom.
Department of Psychology, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham TW20 0EX, United Kingdom
J Neurosci. 2016 Jul 6;36(27):7314-24. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0025-16.2016.
Global motion perception entails the ability to extract the central direction tendency from an extended area of visual space containing widely disparate local directions. A substantial body of evidence suggests that local motion signals generated in primary visual cortex (V1) are spatially integrated to provide perception of global motion, beginning in the middle temporal area (MT) in macaques and its counterpart in humans, hMT. However, V2 and V3 also contain motion-sensitive neurons that have larger receptive fields than those found in V1, giving the potential for spatial integration of motion signals. Despite this, V2 and V3 have been overlooked as sites of global motion processing. To test, free of local-global confounds, whether human V2 and V3 are important for encoding global motion, we developed a visual stimulus that yields a global direction yet includes all possible local directions and is perfectly balanced at the local motion level. We then attempted to decode global motion direction in such stimuli with multivariate pattern classification of fMRI data. We found strong sensitivity to global motion in hMT, as expected, and also in several higher visual areas known to encode optic flow. Crucially, we found that global motion direction could be decoded in human V2 and, particularly, in V3. The results suggest the surprising conclusion that global motion processing is a key function of cortical visual areas V2 and V3. A possible purpose is to provide global motion signals to V6.
Humans can readily detect the overall direction of movement in a flock of birds despite large differences in the directions of individual birds at a given moment. This ability to combine disparate motion signals across space underlies many aspects of visual motion perception and has therefore received considerable research attention. The received wisdom is that spatial integration of motion signals occurs in the cortical motion complex MT+ in both human and nonhuman primates. We show here that areas V2 and V3 in humans are also able to perform this function. We suggest that different cortical areas integrate motion signals in different ways for different purposes.
全局运动感知需要从包含广泛不同局部方向的视觉空间扩展区域中提取中心方向趋势的能力。大量证据表明,在初级视觉皮层(V1)中产生的局部运动信号在空间上进行整合,以提供全局运动感知,这一过程在猕猴的颞中区(MT)及其在人类中的对应区域hMT开始。然而,V2和V3也包含运动敏感神经元,其感受野比V1中的神经元更大,这为运动信号的空间整合提供了潜力。尽管如此,V2和V3一直被忽视作为全局运动处理的部位。为了在没有局部 - 全局混淆的情况下测试人类V2和V3对于编码全局运动是否重要,我们开发了一种视觉刺激,它产生一个全局方向,但包括所有可能的局部方向,并且在局部运动水平上完全平衡。然后,我们尝试通过功能磁共振成像(fMRI)数据的多变量模式分类来解码此类刺激中的全局运动方向。正如预期的那样,我们发现hMT以及几个已知编码光流的更高视觉区域对全局运动具有强烈的敏感性。至关重要的是,我们发现全局运动方向可以在人类V2中解码,特别是在V3中。结果表明了一个令人惊讶的结论,即全局运动处理是皮层视觉区域V2和V3的关键功能。一个可能的目的是向V6提供全局运动信号。
尽管在给定时刻单个鸟类的方向存在很大差异,但人类能够很容易地检测到一群鸟的整体运动方向。这种在空间上组合不同运动信号的能力是视觉运动感知许多方面的基础,因此受到了相当多的研究关注。普遍的观点是,运动信号的空间整合发生在人类和非人类灵长类动物的皮层运动复合体MT +中。我们在此表明,人类的V2和V3区域也能够执行此功能。我们建议不同的皮层区域以不同的方式为不同的目的整合运动信号。