4.7 Article

Visual detection of motion speed in humans: Spatiotemporal analysis by fMRI and MEG

Journal

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
Volume 16, Issue 2, Pages 104-118

Publisher

WILEY-LISS
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.10033

Keywords

extrastriate cortex; human brain; magnetoencephalography; reaction time; visual motion; functional magnetic resonance imaging; speed detection

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Humans take a long time to respond to the slow visual motion of an object. It is not known what neural mechanism causes this delay. We measured magnetoencephalographic neural responses to light spot motion onset within a wide speed range (0.4-500degrees/sec) and compared these with human reaction times (RTs). The mean response latency was inversely related to the speed of motion up to 100degrees/sec, whereas the amplitude increased with the speed. The response property at the speed of 500degrees/sec was different from that at the other speeds. The speed-related latency change was observed when the motion duration was 10 msec or longer in the speed range between 5 and 500degrees/sec, indicating that the response is directly related to the speed itself. The source of the response was estimated to be around the human MT+ and was validated by functional magnetic imaging study using the same stimuli. The results indicate that the speed of motion is encoded in the neural activity of MT+ and that it can be detected within 10 msec of motion observation. RT to the same motion onset was also inversely related to the speed of motion but the delay could not be explained by the magnetic response latency change. Instead, the reciprocal of RT was linearly related to the reciprocal of the magnetic response latency, suggesting that the visual process interacts with other neural processes for decision and motor preparation.

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