4.4 Article

Human neural responses involved in spatial pooling of locally ambiguous motion signals

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
卷 107, 期 12, 页码 3493-3508

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00821.2011

关键词

functional magnetic resonance imaging; integration; magnetoencephalography; middle temporal area

资金

  1. Tamagawa University Global COE Program Origins of the Social Mind, Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), Japan
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [2310037]
  3. MEXT, Japan [22135007]
  4. JSPS Funding Program for Next Generation World-Leading Researchers [LZ004]
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [22135007, 22135004, 22135001] Funding Source: KAKEN

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Amano K, Takeda T, Haji T, Terao M, Maruya K, Matsumoto K, Murakami I, Nishida S. Human neural responses involved in spatial pooling of locally ambiguous motion signals. J Neurophysiol 107: 3493-3508, 2012. First published March 21, 2012; doi:10.1152/jn.00821.2011.-Early visual motion signals are local and one-dimensional (1-D). For specification of global two-dimensional (2-D) motion vectors, the visual system should appropriately integrate these signals across orientation and space. Previous neurophysiological studies have suggested that this integration process consists of two computational steps (estimation of local 2-D motion vectors, followed by their spatial pooling), both being identified in the area MT. Psychophysical findings, however, suggest that under certain stimulus conditions, the human visual system can also compute mathematically correct global motion vectors from direct pooling of spatially distributed 1-D motion signals. To study the neural mechanisms responsible for this novel 1-D motion pooling, we conducted human magnetoencephalography (MEG) and functional MRI experiments using a global motion stimulus comprising multiple moving Gabors (global-Gabor motion). In the first experiment, we measured MEG and blood oxygen level-dependent responses while changing motion coherence of global-Gabor motion. In the second experiment, we investigated cortical responses correlated with direction-selective adaptation to the global 2-D motion, not to local 1-D motions. We found that human MT complex (hMT+) responses show both coherence dependency and direction selectivity to global motion based on 1-D pooling. The results provide the first evidence that hMT+ is the locus of 1-D motion pooling, as well as that of conventional 2-D motion pooling.

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