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Journal ArticleDOI

Impairment of the perception of second order motion but not first order motion in a patient with unilateral focal brain damage.

TLDR
It is shown that a patient with a small unilateral cortical lesion adjacent to human cortical area MT has an apparently permanent disorder in perceiving several forms of second-order but not first-order motion in his contralateral visual field, indicating that separate pathways for motion perception exist.
Abstract
Unlike first order motion, which is based on spatiotemporal variations in luminance, second-order motion relies on spatiotemporal variation of attributes derived from luminance, such as contrast. Here we show that a patient with a small unilateral cortical lesion adjacent to human cortical area MT (V5) has an apparently permanent disorder in perceiving several forms of second-order but not first-order motion in his contralateral visual field. This result indicates that separate pathways for motion perception exist, either as divergent pathways from area MT or even from primary visual cortex, or as separate pathways from subcortical areas to extrastriate visual areas.

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Citations
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Fast Backprojections from the Motion to the Primary Visual Area Necessary for Visual Awareness

TL;DR: Trans transcranial magnetic stimulation is used to probe the timing and function of feedback from human area MT+/V5 to V1 and found its action to be early and critical for awareness of visual motion.
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Three-systems theory of human visual motion perception: review and update

TL;DR: A review and reanalysis of the new evidence, pro and con, resolves the challenges and yields a more clearly defined and significantly strengthened theory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Task–specific impairments and enhancements induced by magnetic stimulation of human visual area V5

TL;DR: Data suggest that attention to different visual attributes involves mutual inhibition between different extrastriate visual areas, and TMS applied to V5 enhanced performance.
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Visuomotor Behaviors in Larval Zebrafish after GFP-Guided Laser Ablation of the Optic Tectum

TL;DR: Testing whether tectum-ablated zebrafish larvae, when presented with large-field movements in their surroundings, displayed optokinetic responses (OKR) or optomotor responses (OMR), two distinct visuomotor behaviors that compensate for self-motion, found neither OKR nor OMR were found to be dependent on intact retinotectal connections.
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Unilateral right parietal damage leads to bilateral deficit for high-level motion

TL;DR: The deficit in apparent motion in the parietal patients supports previous claims that this relatively effortless percept is mediated by attention, but the bilateral deficit suggests that the disruption is due to a bilateral loss in the temporal resolution of attention to transient events that drive the apparent motion percept.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A selective impairment of motion perception following lesions of the middle temporal visual area (MT)

TL;DR: The results indicate that neural activity in MT contributes selectively to the perception of motion.
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Selective and divided attention during visual discriminations of shape, color, and speed: functional anatomy by positron emission tomography

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used positron emission tomography (PET) to identify the neural systems involved in discriminating the shape, color, and speed of a visual stimulus under conditions of selective and divided attention.
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Functional analysis of human MT and related visual cortical areas using magnetic resonance imaging

TL;DR: FMRI activity in human MT does in fact decrease at and near individually measured equiluminance, and area MT has a much higher contrast sensitivity than that in several other areas, including primary visual cortex (V1).
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Area V5 of the Human Brain: Evidence from a Combined Study Using Positron Emission Tomography and Magnetic Resonance Imaging

TL;DR: P positron emission tomography was used to determine the foci of relative cerebral blood flow increases produced when subjects viewed a moving checkerboard pattern, compared to viewing the same pattern when it was stationary.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visual Processing in Monkey Extrastriate Cortex

TL;DR: Three recent developments that have yielded insight into information processing and flow within extrastriate cortex are focused on.
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