Kafaligonul Hulusi, Albright Thomas D, Stoner Gene R
National Magnetic Resonance Research Center, Bilkent University , Ankara , Turkey.
Interdisciplinary Neuroscience Program, Bilkent University , Ankara , Turkey.
J Neurophysiol. 2018 Sep 1;120(3):1340-1355. doi: 10.1152/jn.00835.2017. Epub 2018 Jun 20.
The timing of brief stationary sounds has been shown to alter the perceived speed of visual apparent motion (AM), presumably by altering the perceived timing of the individual frames of the AM stimuli and/or the duration of the interstimulus intervals (ISIs) between those frames. To investigate the neural correlates of this "temporal ventriloquism" illusion, we recorded spiking and local field potential (LFP) activity from the middle temporal area (area MT) in awake, fixating macaques. We found that the spiking activity of most MT neurons (but not the LFP) was tuned for the ISI/speed (these parameters covaried) of our AM stimuli but that auditory timing had no effect on that tuning. We next asked whether the predicted changes in perceived timing were reflected in the timing of neuronal responses to the individual frames of the AM stimuli. Although spiking dynamics were significantly, if weakly, affected by auditory timing in a minority of neurons, the timing of spike responses did not systematically mirror the predicted perception of stimuli. Conversely, the duration of LFP responses in β- and γ-frequency bands was qualitatively consistent with human perceptual reports. We discovered, however, that LFP responses to auditory stimuli presented alone were robust and that responses to audiovisual stimuli were predicted by the linear sum of responses to auditory and visual stimuli presented individually. In conclusion, we find evidence of auditory input into area MT but not of the nonlinear audiovisual interactions we had hypothesized to underlie the illusion. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We utilized a set of audiovisual stimuli that elicit an illusion demonstrating "temporal ventriloquism" in visual motion and that have spatiotemporal intervals for which neurons within the middle temporal area are selective. We found evidence of auditory input into the middle temporal area but not of the nonlinear audiovisual interactions underlying this illusion. Our findings suggest that either the illusion was absent in our nonhuman primate subjects or the neuronal correlates of this illusion lie within other areas.
短暂静止声音的时间安排已被证明会改变视觉似动(AM)的感知速度,大概是通过改变AM刺激各个帧的感知时间和/或这些帧之间的刺激间隔(ISI)的持续时间来实现的。为了研究这种“时间腹语术”错觉的神经关联,我们在清醒、注视的猕猴的颞中区(MT区)记录了动作电位和局部场电位(LFP)活动。我们发现,大多数MT神经元的动作电位活动(但不是LFP)针对我们AM刺激的ISI/速度(这些参数相互协变)进行了调谐,但听觉时间对该调谐没有影响。接下来,我们询问预测的感知时间变化是否反映在神经元对AM刺激各个帧的反应时间上。虽然在少数神经元中,动作电位动态受到听觉时间的显著影响(尽管很微弱),但动作电位反应的时间并没有系统地反映出预测的刺激感知。相反,β和γ频段LFP反应的持续时间在质量上与人类感知报告一致。然而,我们发现LFP对单独呈现的听觉刺激的反应很强,并且对视听刺激的反应可以通过对单独呈现的听觉和视觉刺激的反应的线性总和来预测。总之,我们发现有证据表明听觉输入到MT区,但没有发现我们假设为错觉基础的非线性视听相互作用的证据。新发现与值得注意之处我们使用了一组视听刺激,这些刺激会引发一种错觉,展示视觉运动中的“时间腹语术”,并且具有颞中区神经元具有选择性的时空间隔。我们发现有证据表明听觉输入到颞中区,但没有发现这种错觉基础的非线性视听相互作用的证据。我们的研究结果表明,要么这种错觉在我们的非人类灵长类动物受试者中不存在,要么这种错觉的神经关联位于其他区域。