Psychophysical differences in processing of global motion and form detection and position discrimination

被引:7
作者
Harvey, Benjamin M. [1 ]
Braddick, Oliver J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oxford, Dept Expt Psychol, Visual Dev Unit, Oxford OX1 3UD, England
基金
英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
optic flow; motion perception; psychophysics; position discrimination; spatial summation;
D O I
10.1167/8.7.14
中图分类号
R77 [眼科学];
学科分类号
100212 ;
摘要
In models of complex motion processing of expanding, contracting or rotating patterns, localization of the center of motion is regarded as an implicit function of the system, used for heading determination and achieved by coarse population encoding. The situation modeled contains an optic flow pattern that is modified by including translational motion, as occurs when the observer is not looking directly at their heading, and relies on global processing of the entire optic flow field. Our psychophysics experiments show that accurately localizing the center of a symmetrical complex motion pattern, or an analogous complex radial or concentric form pattern, relies on local processing near the center of the pattern. This contrasts with detection of the same patterns, which involves considerable spatial summation, relies on global processing, and is very tolerant of noisy stimuli. Coarse localization uses both central and peripheral information, involving some spatial summation. Some differences are seen between different pattern types. The low level of spatial summation seen in position discrimination is surprising if position discrimination is seen as an implicit function of the global processing system, and suggests modi. cations may be needed to models of heading determination.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 18
页数:18
相关论文
共 36 条
[1]   A specific deficit of dorsal stream function in Williams' syndrome [J].
Atkinson, J ;
King, J ;
Braddick, O ;
Nokes, L ;
Anker, S ;
Braddick, F .
NEUROREPORT, 1997, 8 (08) :1919-1922
[2]   How can a patient blind to radial motion discriminate shifts in the center-of-motion? [J].
Beardsley, SA ;
Vaina, LM .
JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2005, 18 (01) :55-66
[3]   Form and motion coherence activate independent, but not dorsal/ventral segregated, networks in the human brain [J].
Braddick, OJ ;
O'Brien, JMD ;
Wattam-Bell, J ;
Atkinson, J ;
Turner, R .
CURRENT BIOLOGY, 2000, 10 (12) :731-734
[4]   Area MST and heading perception in macaque monkeys [J].
Britten, KH ;
van Wezel, RJA .
CEREBRAL CORTEX, 2002, 12 (07) :692-701
[5]   Electrical microstimulation of cortical area MST biases heading perception in monkeys [J].
Britten, KH ;
van Wezel, RJA .
NATURE NEUROSCIENCE, 1998, 1 (01) :59-63
[6]   Large receptive fields for optic flow detection in humans [J].
Burr, DC ;
Morrone, MC ;
Vaina, LM .
VISION RESEARCH, 1998, 38 (12) :1731-1743
[7]   V3A processes contour curvature as a trackable feature for the perception of rotational motion [J].
Caplovitz, Gideon P. ;
Tse, Peter U. .
CEREBRAL CORTEX, 2007, 17 (05) :1179-1189
[8]   VISUAL PROPERTIES OF NEURONS IN AREA V4 OF THE MACAQUE - SENSITIVITY TO STIMULUS FORM [J].
DESIMONE, R ;
SCHEIN, SJ .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1987, 57 (03) :835-868
[9]   SENSITIVITY OF MST NEURONS TO OPTIC FLOW STIMULI .2. MECHANISMS OF RESPONSE SELECTIVITY REVEALED BY SMALL-FIELD STIMULI [J].
DUFFY, CJ ;
WURTZ, RH .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1991, 65 (06) :1346-1359
[10]   SENSITIVITY OF MST NEURONS TO OPTIC FLOW STIMULI .1. A CONTINUUM OF RESPONSE SELECTIVITY TO LARGE-FIELD STIMULI [J].
DUFFY, CJ ;
WURTZ, RH .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1991, 65 (06) :1329-1345