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Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of object motion in the ventral part of the medial superior temporal area of the macaque visual cortex

K. Tanaka, +3 more
- 01 Jan 1993 - 
- Vol. 69, Iss: 1, pp 128-142
TLDR
The ventral part of the medial superior temporal area is distinctive from the dorsal part of MST and is mainly involved in the analysis of object movements in external space.
Abstract
1. The medial superior temporal area (MST) is an extrastriate area of the macaque visual cortex. Cells in MST have large receptive fields and respond to moving stimuli with directional selectivity. We previously suggested that the dorsal part of MST is mainly involved in analysis of field motion caused by movements of the animal itself, because most cells in the dorsal part preferentially responded to movements of a wide textured field rather than to movements of a small stimulus. To determine whether the remaining ventral part of MST differs in function from the dorsal part, we examined properties of cells in the ventral part in comparison with those of cells in the dorsal part, using anesthetized and paralyzed preparation. 2. Most cells in the ventral part preferably responded to movements of a small stimulus rather than to movements of a wide textured field. 3. Although the cells in the ventral part did not respond to movements of a textured field over a large window, many of them began to respond when a small stationary object was introduced in front of the moving field. The direction to which the cells responded in this stimulus configuration was opposite to the direction in which they responded to movements of an object on a stationary background. Activities of these cells thus represented the direction of relative movement of an object on a background, irrespective of whether the image of the object or the background moved on the retina. 4. We conclude that the ventral part of MST is distinctive from the dorsal part of MST and is mainly involved in the analysis of object movements in external space.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Combined spatial and temporal imaging of brain activity during visual selective attention in humans.

TL;DR: Together neuroimaging and e.r.p. recording showed that visual inputs from attended locations receive enhanced processing in the extrastriate cortex (fusiform gyrus) at 80–130 ms after stimulus onset, which reinforces early selection models of attention.
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Neural correlates of multisensory cue integration in macaque MSTd

TL;DR: The findings show that perceptual cue integration occurs in nonhuman primates and identify a population of neurons that may form its neural basis.
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Visual motion processing investigated using contrast agent-enhanced fMRI in awake behaving monkeys

TL;DR: FMRI signals produced by moving and stationary stimuli (random dots or lines) in fixating monkeys are mapped to clarify the relationship between the motion pathway and the dorsal stream in primates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visual motion perception

TL;DR: A coherent portrait is painted of the means by which retinal image motion gives rise to the perceptual experience of moving objects, which must rely upon utilization of retinal cues that are indicative of the spatial relationships within and between objects in the visual scene.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visual field maps, population receptive field sizes, and visual field coverage in the human MT+ complex.

TL;DR: Using a novel functional MRI model-based method, two maps are identified-TO-1 and TO-2-and population receptive field (pRF) sizes are measured within these maps, providing a functional segmentation of human motion-sensitive cortex that enables a more complete characterization of processing in humanmotion-selective cortex.
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