Adaptation to real motion reveals direction-selective interactions between real and implied motion processing
Publication year
2007Source
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 19, 8, (2007), pp. 1231-1240ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Cognitive Neuroscience
Journal title
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Volume
vol. 19
Issue
iss. 8
Page start
p. 1231
Page end
p. 1240
Subject
BiophysicsAbstract
Viewing static pictures of running humans evokes neural activity in the dorsal motion-sensitive cortex. To establish whether this response arises from direction-selective neurons that are also involved in real motion processing, we measured the visually evoked potential to implied motion following adaptation to static or moving random dot patterns. The implied motion response was defined as the difference between evoked potentials to pictures with and without implied motion. Interaction between real and implied motion was found as a modulation of this difference response by the preceding motion adaptation. The amplitude of the implied motion response was significantly reduced after adaptation to motion in the same direction as the implied motion, compared to motion in the opposite direction. At 280 msec after stimulus onset, the average difference in amplitude reduction between opposite and same adapted direction was 0.5 µV on an average implied motion amplitude of 2.0 µV. These results indicate that the response to implied motion arises from direction-selective motion-sensitive neurons. This is consistent with interactions between real and implied motion processing at a neuronal level.
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