A neural basis for the spatial suppression of visual motion perception

被引:42
|
作者
Liu, Liu D. [1 ]
Haefner, Ralf M. [2 ]
Pack, Christopher C. [1 ]
机构
[1] McGill Univ, Montreal Neurol Inst, Dept Neurol & Neurosurg, Montreal, PQ H3A 2B4, Canada
[2] Univ Rochester, Dept Brain & Cognit Sci, Rochester, NY 14627 USA
来源
ELIFE | 2016年 / 5卷
基金
加拿大健康研究院;
关键词
CENTER-SURROUND INTERACTIONS; CHOICE-RELATED ACTIVITY; CORTICAL AREA MT; RECEPTIVE-FIELD; PSYCHOPHYSICAL PERFORMANCE; INTERNEURONAL CORRELATIONS; CORRELATED VARIABILITY; NOISE CORRELATIONS; ALERT MACAQUE; EYE-MOVEMENTS;
D O I
10.7554/eLife.16167
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
In theory, sensory perception should be more accurate when more neurons contribute to the representation of a stimulus. However, psychophysical experiments that use larger stimuli to activate larger pools of neurons sometimes report impoverished perceptual performance. To determine the neural mechanisms underlying these paradoxical findings, we trained monkeys to discriminate the direction of motion of visual stimuli that varied in size across trials, while simultaneously recording from populations of motion-sensitive neurons in cortical area MT. We used the resulting data to constrain a computational model that explained the behavioral data as an interaction of three main mechanisms: noise correlations, which prevented stimulus information from growing with stimulus size; neural surround suppression, which decreased sensitivity for large stimuli; and a read-out strategy that emphasized neurons with receptive fields near the stimulus center. These results suggest that paradoxical percepts reflect tradeoffs between sensitivity and noise in neuronal populations.
引用
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Stronger Neural Modulation by Visual Motion Intensity in Autism Spectrum Disorders
    Peiker, Ina
    Schneider, Till R.
    Milne, Elizabeth
    Schoettle, Daniel
    Vogeley, Kai
    Muenchau, Alexander
    Schunke, Odette
    Siegel, Markus
    Engel, Andreas K.
    David, Nicole
    PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (07):
  • [32] Roles of visual and non-visual information in the perception of scene-relative object motion during walking
    Xie, Mingyang
    Niehorster, Diederick C.
    Lappe, Markus
    Li, Li
    JOURNAL OF VISION, 2020, 20 (10): : 1 - 11
  • [33] Neural Computations Governing Spatiotemporal Pooling of Visual Motion Signals in Humans
    Webb, Ben S.
    Ledgeway, Timothy
    Rocchi, Francesca
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2011, 31 (13) : 4917 - 4925
  • [34] Neural Selectivity for Visual Motion in Macaque Area V3A
    Nakhla, Nardin
    Korkian, Yavar
    Krause, Matthew R.
    Pack, Christopher C.
    ENEURO, 2021, 8 (01) : 1 - 14
  • [35] Spatial and non-spatial aspects of visual attention: Interactive cognitive mechanisms and neural underpinnings
    Chechlacz, Magdalena
    Humphreys, Glyn W.
    Cazzoli, Dario
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2016, 92 : 1 - 6
  • [36] Visual Perception Is Highly Flexible and Context Dependent in Young Infants: A Case of Top-Down-Modulated Motion Perception
    Xiao, Naiqi G.
    Emberson, Lauren L.
    PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2023, 34 (08) : 875 - 886
  • [37] THE NEURAL BASIS OF HAZARD PERCEPTION DIFFERENCES BETWEEN NOVICE AND EXPERIENCED DRIVERS - AN FMRI STUDY
    Gharib, Seifollah
    Zare-Sadeghi, Arash
    Zakerian, Seyed Abolfazl
    Haidari, Mohsen Reza
    EXCLI JOURNAL, 2020, 19 : 547 - 566
  • [38] A computational relationship between thalamic sensory neural responses and contrast perception
    Jiang, Yaoguang
    Purushothaman, Gopathy
    Casagrande, Vivien A.
    FRONTIERS IN NEURAL CIRCUITS, 2015, 9
  • [39] Neural correlates of visual-spatial attention in electrocorticographic signals in humans
    Gunduz, Aysegul
    Brunner, Peter
    Daitch, Amy
    Leuthardt, Eric C.
    Ritaccio, Anthony L.
    Pesaran, Bijan
    Schalk, Gerwin
    FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE, 2011, 5
  • [40] Influence of Human Visual Perception and Eye Tracking Motion on the Quality of Moving Image in LCD
    Cui, Yuan
    Yu, Yang
    Chen, Zhuyang
    Xue, Bo
    IEEE Access, 2020, 8 : 73634 - 73644