Chuang Jason, Ausloos Emily C, Schwebach Courtney A, Huang Xin
Department of Neuroscience, School of Medical and Public Health, McPherson Eye Research Institute, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin.
Department of Neuroscience, School of Medical and Public Health, McPherson Eye Research Institute, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin
J Neurophysiol. 2016 Dec 1;116(6):2765-2776. doi: 10.1152/jn.01068.2015. Epub 2016 Sep 28.
The perception of visual motion can be profoundly influenced by visual context. To gain insight into how the visual system represents motion speed, we investigated how a background stimulus that did not move in a net direction influenced the perceived speed of a center stimulus. Visual stimuli were two overlapping random-dot patterns. The center stimulus moved coherently in a fixed direction, whereas the background stimulus moved randomly. We found that human subjects perceived the speed of the center stimulus to be significantly faster than its veridical speed when the background contained motion noise. Interestingly, the perceived speed was tuned to the noise level of the background. When the speed of the center stimulus was low, the highest perceived speed was reached when the background had a low level of motion noise. As the center speed increased, the peak perceived speed was reached at a progressively higher background noise level. The effect of speed overestimation required the center stimulus to overlap with the background. Increasing the background size within a certain range enhanced the effect, suggesting spatial integration. The speed overestimation was significantly reduced or abolished when the center stimulus and the background stimulus had different colors, or when they were placed at different depths. When the center- and background-stimuli were perceptually separable, speed overestimation was correlated with perceptual similarity between the center- and background-stimuli. These results suggest that integration of motion energy from random motion noise has a significant impact on speed perception. Our findings put new constraints on models regarding the neural basis of speed perception.
视觉运动的感知会受到视觉环境的深刻影响。为了深入了解视觉系统如何表征运动速度,我们研究了一个在净方向上不移动的背景刺激如何影响中心刺激的感知速度。视觉刺激是两个重叠的随机点图案。中心刺激在固定方向上连贯移动,而背景刺激随机移动。我们发现,当背景包含运动噪声时,人类受试者感知到的中心刺激速度明显快于其真实速度。有趣的是,感知速度与背景的噪声水平相匹配。当中心刺激的速度较低时,背景运动噪声水平较低时达到最高感知速度。随着中心速度的增加,在逐渐升高的背景噪声水平下达到峰值感知速度。速度高估效应要求中心刺激与背景重叠。在一定范围内增加背景大小会增强这种效应,表明存在空间整合。当中心刺激和背景刺激具有不同颜色或放置在不同深度时,速度高估会显著降低或消除。当中心刺激和背景刺激在感知上可分离时,速度高估与中心刺激和背景刺激之间的感知相似性相关。这些结果表明,来自随机运动噪声的运动能量整合对速度感知有重大影响。我们的发现对关于速度感知神经基础的模型提出了新的限制。