Contour from motion processing occurs in primary visual cortex

Nature ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 363 (6429) ◽  
pp. 541-543 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor A. F. Lamme ◽  
Bob W. van Dijk ◽  
Henk Spekreijse
Author(s):  
Simone Gori

This chapter describes the Rotating-Tilted-Lines illusion , which is a new motion illusion that arises in a circular pattern composed by black, radial lines tilted to the right and presented on a white background. When one approaches the stimulus pattern, the radial lines appear to rotate in the counterclockwise direction, whereas when one recedes from it, they appear to rotate clockwise. It is the simplest pattern able to elicit illusory rotatory motion in presence of physical radial expansion. This surprising misperception of motion seems to be a result of the competition between two motion processing units in the primary visual cortex (V1, V5)


2007 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
B.G. OUELLETTE ◽  
K. MINVILLE ◽  
D. BOIRE ◽  
M. PTITO ◽  
C. CASANOVA

In the cat, the analysis of visual motion cues has generally been attributed to the posteromedial lateral suprasylvian cortex (PMLS) (Toyama et al., 1985; Rauschecker et al., 1987; Rauschecker, 1988; Kim et al., 1997). The responses of neurons in this area are not critically dependent on inputs from the primary visual cortex (VC), as lesions of VC leave neuronal response properties in PMLS relatively unchanged (Spear & Baumann, 1979; Spear, 1988; Guido et al., 1990b). However, previous studies have used a limited range of visual stimuli. In this study, we assessed whether neurons in PMLS cortex remained direction-selective to complex motion stimuli following a lesion of VC, particularly to complex random dot kinematograms (RDKs). Unilateral aspiration of VC was performed on post-natal days 7–9. Single unit extracellular recordings were performed one year later in the ipsilateral PMLS cortex. As in previous studies, a reduction in the percentage of direction selective neurons was observed with drifting sinewave gratings. We report a previously unobserved phenomenon with sinewave gratings, in which there is a greater modulation of firing rate at the temporal frequency of the stimulus in animals with a lesion of VC, suggesting an increased segregation of ON and OFF sub-regions. A significant portion of neurons in PMLS cortex were direction selective to simple (16/18) and complex (11/16) RDKs. However, the strength of direction selectivity to both stimuli was reduced as compared to normals. The data suggest that complex motion processing is still present, albeit reduced, in PMLS cortex despite the removal of VC input. The complex RDK motion selectivity is consistent with both geniculo-cortical and extra-geniculate thalamo-cortical pathways in residual direction encoding.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Danckert ◽  
Christopher Lee Striemer ◽  
Yves Rossetti

For over a century research has demonstrated that damage to primary visual cortex does not eliminate all capacity for visual processing in the brain. From Riddoch’s (1917) early demonstration of intact motion processing for blind field stimuli, to the iconic work of Weiskrantz and colleagues (1974) showing reliable spatial localization, it is clear that secondary visual pathways that bypass V1 carry information to the visual brain that in turn influences behavior. In this chapter we briefly outline the history and phenomena associated with blindsight, before discussing the nature of the secondary visual pathways that support residual visual processing in the absence of V1. We finish with some speculation as to the functional characteristics of these secondary pathways.


2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (12) ◽  
pp. 1182
Author(s):  
Heywood Petry ◽  
Wenhao Dang ◽  
Elizabeth Johnson ◽  
Stephen Van Hooser

Perception ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 26 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. 344-344
Author(s):  
R Satinskas ◽  
O Ruksenas ◽  
A Pleskaciauskas ◽  
D Stabinyte ◽  
H Vaitkevicius

We have studied the selectivity for speed and direction of directionally selective (DS) cells in the primary visual cortex of the cat. Most of the 37 DS neurons tested were velocity tuned. From a set of velocities in the range from 2 to 80 deg s−1, each velocity was optimal for a certain proportion of these cells. The distribution was as follows: 2 deg s−1 was optimal for 16% of all tested neurons, 5 deg s−1 for 14%, 10 deg s−1 for 27%, 20 deg s−1 for 30%, 40 deg s−1 for 8%, and 80 deg s−1 for 5%. The preferred direction determined with a single light spot was compared with that obtained with a pair of spots moving at a mutual angle of 60° over the receptive field. For 40% of the neurons tested the preferred direction to the single moving spot coincided with that obtained with the two-spot stimulus. The responses to the latter could be successfully computed as a combination of responses to single spots moving in the given directions. This result indicates a high capacity for motion processing in the primary visual cortex of the cat.


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