Department of Neuroscience, Ruth and Bruce Rappaport Faculty of Medicine and Research Institute, The Technion, Haifa 31096, Israel and.
Department of Zoology and Animal Physiology, Institute for Biology II, RWTH Aachen University, D-52074 Aachen, Germany.
J Neurosci. 2018 Jul 25;38(30):6653-6664. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0174-18.2018. Epub 2018 Jul 2.
Perceiving an object as salient from its surround often requires a preceding process of grouping the object and background elements as perceptual wholes. In humans, motion homogeneity provides a strong cue for grouping, yet it is unknown to what extent this occurs in nonprimate species. To explore this question, we studied the effects of visual motion homogeneity in barn owls of both genders, at the behavioral as well as the neural level. Our data show that the coherency of the background motion modulates the perceived saliency of the target object. An object moving in an odd direction relative to other objects attracted more attention when the other objects moved homogeneously compared with when moved in a variety of directions. A possible neural correlate of this effect may arise in the population activity of the intermediate/deep layers of the optic tectum. In these layers, the neural responses to a moving element in the receptive field were suppressed when additional elements moved in the surround. However, when the surrounding elements all moved in one direction (homogeneously moving), they induced less suppression of the response compared with nonhomogeneously moving elements. Moreover, neural responses were more sensitive to the homogeneity of the background motion than to motion-direction contrasts between the receptive field and the surround. The findings suggest similar principles of saliency-by-motion in an avian species as in humans and show a locus in the optic tectum where the underlying neural circuitry may exist. A critical task of the visual system is to arrange incoming visual information to a meaningful scene of objects and background. In humans, elements that move homogeneously are grouped perceptually to form a categorical whole object. We discovered a similar principle in the barn owl's visual system, whereby the homogeneity of the motion of elements in the scene allows perceptually distinguishing an object from its surround. The novel findings of these visual effects in an avian species, which lacks neocortical structure, suggest that our basic visual perception shares more universal principles across species than presently thought, and shed light on possible brain mechanisms for perceptual grouping.
从周围环境中感知到一个物体通常需要一个将物体和背景元素组合成整体的先验过程。在人类中,运动同质性提供了一个强大的分组线索,但在非灵长类动物中,这种情况发生的程度尚不清楚。为了探索这个问题,我们研究了两性Barn 猫头鹰的视觉运动同质性在行为和神经水平上的影响。我们的数据表明,背景运动的连贯性会调节目标物体的感知显著性。与其他物体以各种方向移动相比,当其他物体以同质性移动时,相对于其他物体以奇怪方向移动的物体更能吸引注意力。这种效应的可能神经相关物可能出现在光学顶盖的中间/深层的群体活动中。在这些层中,当视野中的其他元素移动时,对运动元素的神经反应受到抑制。然而,当周围的元素都朝一个方向移动(同相运动)时,与非同相运动的元素相比,它们对反应的抑制作用较小。此外,神经反应对背景运动的同质性比对视野和周围之间的运动方向对比更为敏感。这些发现表明,在鸟类物种中存在类似于人类的运动显著性原理,并显示出在光学顶盖中存在潜在的神经回路。视觉系统的一个关键任务是将输入的视觉信息排列成一个有意义的物体和背景场景。在人类中,同相运动的元素被感知地分组形成一个类别整体物体。我们在 Barn 猫头鹰的视觉系统中发现了一个类似的原理,即场景中元素的运动同质性允许从周围环境中感知到物体。这些在缺乏新皮质结构的鸟类物种中发现的视觉效果的新发现表明,我们的基本视觉感知在物种间共享更多的普遍原理,而不是目前认为的那样,并且为感知分组的可能大脑机制提供了启示。