4.7 Article

Human V6 Integrates Visual and Extra-Retinal Cues during Head-Induced Gaze Shifts

Journal

ISCIENCE
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages 191-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2018.09.004

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Centre for Integrative Neuroscience, Tubingen
  2. German Excellence Initiative of the German Research Foundation (DFG) [EXC307]
  3. DFG [BA 4914/3-1, SFB 1233, TP09]
  4. University Clinics Tubingen Fortune [2251-0-0]
  5. Max Planck Society, Germany

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A key question in vision research concerns how the brain compensates for self-induced eye and head movements to form the world-centered, spatiotopic representations we perceive. Although human V3A and V6 integrate eye movements with vision, it is undear which areas integrate head motion signals with visual retinotopic representations, as fMRI typically prevents head movement executions. Here we examined whether human early visual cortex V3A and V6 integrate these signals. A previously introduced paradigm allowed participant head movement during trials, but stabilized the head during data acquisition utilizing the delay between blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) and neural signals. Visual stimuli simulated either a stable environment or one with arbitrary head-coupled visual motion. Importantly, both conditions were matched in retinal and head motion. Contrasts revealed differential responses in human V6. Given the lack of vestibular responses in primate V6, these results suggest multi-modal integration of visual with neck efference copy signals or proprioception in V6.

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