4.2 Article

Feedback to V1: a reverse hierarchy in vision

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 150, Issue 2, Pages 259-263

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00221-003-1478-5

Keywords

transcranial magnetic stimulation; double pulse TMS; V1; reverse hierarchy theory; visual search; delayed onset rTMS

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We examined the involvement of visual area V1 in visual detection to assess the role of feedback connections to V1 as proposed in reverse hierarchy theory (Ahissar and Hochstein 2000). In Experiment 1, signal detection was decreased in feature and conjunction detection tasks by repetitive pulse TMS (rTMS) over VI for 500 ins after stimulus onset. In Experiment 2, rTMS was delayed to allow uninterrupted signal processing for 100 ins after visual stimulus onset. TMS for the subsequent 500 ms now disrupted detection of conjunction but not feature targets. In Experiment 3 we applied double pulse TMS at varying intervals to assess the timing of V1 involvement in these tasks. Single feature detection involved V1 only at some point between 40 and 100 ms after visual array onset; detection of targets defined by conjunctions of features involved V1 throughout the first 100 ins and also between 200 and 240 ms after visual stimulus onset. We suggest that the early effects in the conjunction task are due to 'repeated sampling of the visual array to extract the signal from external noise. The later effects in conjunction search are attributed to the return projections from secondary visual areas back to V1, consistent with the reverse hierarchy theory. The effects in both tasks are consistent with early and repeated iterations of feed forward and feedback loops as hypothesised in recent neurophysiological experiments (see Foxe and Simpson 2002).

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