Birman Daniel, Gardner Justin L
Department of Psychology, Stanford University , Stanford, California.
J Neurophysiol. 2018 Oct 1;120(4):1824-1839. doi: 10.1152/jn.00433.2018. Epub 2018 Jul 11.
Despite the central use of motion visibility to reveal the neural basis of perception, perceptual decision making, and sensory inference there exists no comprehensive quantitative framework establishing how motion visibility parameters modulate human cortical response. Random-dot motion stimuli can be made less visible by reducing image contrast or motion coherence, or by shortening the stimulus duration. Because each of these manipulations modulates the strength of sensory neural responses they have all been extensively used to reveal cognitive and other nonsensory phenomena such as the influence of priors, attention, and choice-history biases. However, each of these manipulations is thought to influence response in different ways across different cortical regions and a comprehensive study is required to interpret this literature. Here, human participants observed random-dot stimuli varying across a large range of contrast, coherence, and stimulus durations as we measured blood-oxygen-level dependent responses. We developed a framework for modeling these responses that quantifies their functional form and sensitivity across areas. Our framework demonstrates the sensitivity of all visual areas to each parameter, with early visual areas V1-V4 showing more parametric sensitivity to changes in contrast and V3A and the human middle temporal area to coherence. Our results suggest that while motion contrast, coherence, and duration share cortical representation, they are encoded with distinct functional forms and sensitivity. Thus, our quantitative framework serves as a reference for interpretation of the vast perceptual literature manipulating these parameters and shows that different manipulations of visibility will have different effects across human visual cortex and need to be interpreted accordingly. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Manipulations of motion visibility have served as a key tool for understanding the neural basis for visual perception. Here we measured human cortical response to changes in visibility across a comprehensive range of motion visibility parameters and modeled these with a quantitative framework. Our quantitative framework can be used as a reference for linking human cortical response to perception and underscores that different manipulations of motion visibility can have greatly different effects on cortical representation.
尽管运动可见性在揭示感知、感知决策和感觉推理的神经基础方面具有核心作用,但目前尚无全面的定量框架来确定运动可见性参数如何调节人类皮层反应。通过降低图像对比度、运动连贯性或缩短刺激持续时间,可以使随机点运动刺激变得不那么明显。由于这些操作中的每一种都会调节感觉神经反应的强度,因此它们都被广泛用于揭示认知和其他非感觉现象,如先验、注意力和选择历史偏差的影响。然而,人们认为这些操作中的每一种都会以不同的方式影响不同皮层区域的反应,因此需要进行全面的研究来解读这一文献。在这里,当我们测量血氧水平依赖反应时,人类参与者观察了在大范围对比度、连贯性和刺激持续时间内变化的随机点刺激。我们开发了一个用于对这些反应进行建模的框架,该框架量化了它们在各个区域的功能形式和敏感性。我们的框架展示了所有视觉区域对每个参数的敏感性,早期视觉区域V1-V4对对比度变化表现出更高的参数敏感性;V3A和人类颞中区对连贯性表现出更高的参数敏感性。我们的结果表明,虽然运动对比度、连贯性和持续时间共享皮层表征,但它们是以不同的功能形式和敏感性进行编码的。因此,我们的定量框架可作为解读大量操纵这些参数的感知文献的参考,并表明对可见性的不同操纵将在人类视觉皮层中产生不同的影响,需要相应地进行解读。
运动可见性的操纵已成为理解视觉感知神经基础的关键工具。在这里,我们测量了人类皮层对一系列广泛的运动可见性参数变化的反应,并用一个定量框架对其进行建模。我们的定量框架可作为将人类皮层反应与感知联系起来的参考,并强调对运动可见性的不同操纵可能对皮层表征产生非常不同的影响。