4.7 Article

Figure-Ground Processing during Fixational Saccades in V1: Indication for Higher-Order Stability

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 34, Issue 9, Pages 3247-3252

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4375-13.2014

Keywords

contour integration; figure-ground; fixational saccades; primary visual cortex; visual stability; voltage-sensitive dye imaging

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft: Program of German-Israeli Project cooperation (DIP) [185/1-1]
  2. Israeli Center of Research Excellence (I-CORE) in Cognition (I-CORE Program) [51/11]

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In a typical visual scene we continuously perceive a figure that is segregated from the surrounding background despite ongoing microsaccades and small saccades that are performed when attempting fixation (fixational saccades [FSs]). Previously reported neuronal correlates of figure-ground (FG) segregation in the primary visual cortex (V1) showed enhanced activity in the figure along with suppressed activity in the noisy background. However, it is unknown how this FG modulation in V1 is affected by FSs. To investigate this question, we trained two monkeys to detect a contour embedded in a noisy background while simultaneously imaging V1 using voltage-sensitive dyes. During stimulus presentation, the monkeys typically performed 1-3 FSs, which displaced the contour over the retina. Using eye position and a 2D analytical model to map the stimulus onto V1, we were able to compute FG modulation before and after each FS. On the spatial cortical scale, we found that, after each FS, FG modulation follows the stimulus retinal displacement and hops within the V1 retinotopic map, suggesting visual instability. On the temporal scale, FG modulation is initiated in the new retinotopic position before it disappeared from the old retinotopic position. Moreover, the FG modulation developed faster after an FS, compared with after stimulus onset, which may contribute to visual stability of FG segregation, along the timeline of stimulus presentation. Therefore, despite spatial discontinuity of FG modulation in V1, the higher-order stability of FG modulation along time may enable our stable and continuous perception.

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