Newsome W T, Mikami A, Wurtz R H
J Neurophysiol. 1986 Jun;55(6):1340-51. doi: 10.1152/jn.1986.55.6.1340.
We have conducted physiological and psychophysical experiments to identify possible neural substrates of the perception of apparent motion. We used identical sequences of flashed stimuli in both sets of experiments to better compare the responses of cortical neurons and psychophysical observers. Physiological data were obtained from two cortical visual areas, striate cortex (V1) and the middle temporal area (MT). In the previous paper we presented evidence that neuronal thresholds for direction selectivity in extrastriate area MT were similar to psychophysical thresholds for motion perception at the largest effective interflash interval, and thus speed, for a given eccentricity. We now examine physiological and psychophysical thresholds for a broad range of speeds to determine whether such a correspondence exists for speeds below the upper threshold considered in the previous paper. Stimuli were presented in stroboscopic motion of constant apparent speed while the spatial and temporal interflash intervals were systematically varied. For each neuron we measured the largest spatial interval that elicited directionally selective responses at each of several apparent speeds. We calculated the composite performance of neurons in both MT and V1 by averaging the spatial interval necessary for direction selectivity at each apparent speed. We employed the same apparent-motion stimuli for psychophysical experiments with human subjects in which we measured the spatial interval necessary for the perception of motion over a similar range of apparent speeds. We obtained a composite profile of psychophysical performance by averaging thresholds across subjects at each apparent speed. For high apparent speeds, physiological data from MT, but not V1, corresponded closely to the psychophysical data as suggested in the preceding paper. For low apparent speeds, however, physiological data from MT and V1 were similar to each other and to the psychophysical data. It would appear, therefore, that neurons in either V1 or MT could mediate the perceptual effect at low speeds, whereas MT is a stronger candidate for this role at high speeds. We suggest that the neuronal substrate for apparent motion may be distributed over multiple cortical areas, depending upon the speed and spatial interval of the stimulus.
我们进行了生理和心理物理学实验,以确定视在运动感知的可能神经基础。在两组实验中,我们使用了相同的闪光刺激序列,以便更好地比较皮层神经元和心理物理学观察者的反应。生理数据取自两个皮层视觉区域,即纹状皮层(V1)和颞中区(MT)。在之前的论文中,我们提供了证据表明,在给定离心率下,在最大有效闪光间隔(即速度)时,纹外区域MT中方向选择性的神经元阈值与运动感知的心理物理学阈值相似。我们现在研究广泛速度范围内的生理和心理物理学阈值,以确定对于低于前一篇论文中考虑的上限阈值的速度,是否存在这样的对应关系。刺激以恒定视在速度的频闪运动呈现,同时系统地改变空间和时间闪光间隔。对于每个神经元,我们测量了在几种视在速度下每种速度下引发方向选择性反应的最大空间间隔。我们通过平均每个视在速度下方向选择性所需的空间间隔,计算了MT和V1中神经元的综合表现。我们将相同的视在运动刺激用于对人类受试者的心理物理学实验,在该实验中,我们测量了在相似视在速度范围内感知运动所需的空间间隔。我们通过平均每个视在速度下受试者的阈值,获得了心理物理学表现的综合概况。对于高视在速度,如前一篇论文所表明的,来自MT而非V1的生理数据与心理物理学数据密切对应。然而,对于低视在速度,来自MT和V1的生理数据彼此相似且与心理物理学数据相似。因此,似乎V1或MT中的神经元在低速时都可以介导感知效应,而在高速时MT是这个角色的更强候选者。我们认为,视在运动的神经基础可能分布在多个皮层区域,这取决于刺激的速度和空间间隔。