Invariant Temporal Dynamics Underlie Perceptual Stability in Human Visual Cortex

An inherent limitation of human visual system research stems from its reliance on highly controlled laboratory conditions. Visual processing in the real world differs substantially from such controlled conditions. In particular, during natural vision, we continuously sample the dynamic environment b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current biology 2017-01, Vol.27 (2), p.155-165
Hauptverfasser: Podvalny, Ella, Yeagle, Erin, Mégevand, Pierre, Sarid, Nimrod, Harel, Michal, Chechik, Gal, Mehta, Ashesh D., Malach, Rafael
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:An inherent limitation of human visual system research stems from its reliance on highly controlled laboratory conditions. Visual processing in the real world differs substantially from such controlled conditions. In particular, during natural vision, we continuously sample the dynamic environment by variable eye movements that lead to inherent instability of the optical image. The neuronal mechanism by which human perception remains stable under these natural conditions remains unknown. Here, we examined a neural mechanism that may contribute to such stability, i.e., the extent to which neuronal responses remain invariant to oculomotor parameters and viewing conditions. To this end, we introduce an experimental paradigm in which intracranial brain activity, a video of the real-life visual scene, and free oculomotor behavior were simultaneously recorded in human patients. Our results reveal, in high-order visual areas, a remarkable level of neural invariance to the length of eye fixations and lack of evidence for a saccade-related neuronal signature. Thus, neuronal responses, while showing high selectivity to the category of visual images, manifested stable “iconic” dynamics. This property of invariance to fixation onset and duration emerged only in high-order visual representations. In early visual cortex, the fixation onset was accompanied with suppressive neural signal, and duration of neuronal responses was largely determined by the fixation times. These results uncover unique neuronal dynamics in high-order ventral stream visual areas that could play an important role in achieving perceptual stability, despite the drastic changes introduced by oculomotor behavior in real life. •High-order visual areas show stable transient dynamics invariant to viewing settings•Stable temporal dynamics are content selective and independent of eye movements•Early visual dynamics are sensitivity to stimulation parameters and eye movements•Early visual dynamics are fast and determined by fixation duration in natural vision Podvalny et al. studied neural dynamics evolution along visual hierarchy during real-life visual experience in human. They found content-selective, stable dynamics, which were invariant to eye movements and unique to high-order visual cortex. These results indicate one plausible mechanism for perceptual stability in natural vision.
ISSN:0960-9822
1879-0445
DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2016.11.024