Motion Perception

Research Papers

Visual perceptual learning of a primitive feature in human V1/V2 as a result of unconscious processing, revealed by decoded functional MRI neurofeedback (DecNef)

Wang, Zhiyan, Tamaki, Masako, Frank, Sebastian M., Shibata, Kazuhisa, Worden, Michael S., Yamada, Takashi, Kawato, Mitsuo, Sasaki, Yuka, Watanabe, Takeo (2021) · Journal of Vision

Although numerous studies have shown that visual perceptual learning (VPL) occurs as a result of exposure to a visual feature in a task-irrelevant manner, the underlying neural mechanism is poorly understood. In a previous psychophysical study (Watanabe et al., 2002), subjects were repeatedly exposed to a task-irrelevant Sekuler motion display that induced the perception of not only the local motions, but also a global motionmoving in the direction of the spatiotemporal average of the local motion vectors. As a result of this exposure, subjects enhanced their sensitivity only to the local moving directions, suggesting that early visual areas (V1/V2) that process local motions are involved in task-irrelevant VPL. However, this hypothesis has never been tested directly using neuronal recordings. Here, we employed a decoded neurofeedback technique (DecNef) using functional magnetic resonance imaging in human subjects to examine the involvement of early visual areas (V1/V2) in task-irrelevant VPL of local motion within a Sekuler motion display. During the DecNef training, subjects were trained to induce the activity patterns in V1/V2 that were similar to those evoked by the actual presentation of the Sekuler motion display. The DecNef training was conducted with neither the actual presentation of the display nor the subjects' awareness of the purpose of the experiment. After the experiment, subjects reported that they neither perceived nor imagined the trained motion during the DecNef training. As a result of DecNef training, subjects increased their sensitivity to the local motion directions, but not specifically to the global motion direction. Neuronal changes related to DecNef training were confined to V1/V2. These results suggest that V1/V2 are involved in exposure-based task-irrelevant VPL of local motion.

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Optimal spatial frequencies for discrimination of motion direction in optic flow patterns

Kim, J., Turano, K. A. (1999) · Vision Research

Spatial frequency tuning functions were measured for direction discrimination of optic flow patterns. Three subjects discriminated the direction of a curved motion path using computer generated optic flow patterns composed of randomly positioned dots. Performance was measured with unfiltered patterns and with patterns that were spatially filtered across a range of spatial frequencies (center spatial frequencies of 0.4, 0.8, 1.6, 3.2, 6.4, and 9.6 c/deg). The same subjects discriminated the direction of uniform, translational motion on the fronto-parallel plane. The uniform motion patterns were also composed of randomly positioned dots, that were either unfiltered or filtered with the same spatial filters used for the optic flow patterns. The peak spatial frequency was the same for both the optic flow and uniform motion patterns. For both types of motion, a narrow band (1.5 octaves) of optimal spatial frequencies was sufficient to support the same level of performance as found with unfiltered, broadband patterns. Additional experiments demonstrated that the peak spatial frequency for the optic flow patterns varies with mean image speed in the same manner as has been reported for moving sinusoidal gratings. These findings confirm the hypothesis that the outputs of the local motion mechanisms thought to underlie the perception of uniform motion provide the inputs to, and constrain the operation of, the mechanism that processes self motion from optic flow patterns.

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