Response characteristics of the pigeon's pretectal neurons to illusory contours and motion
Misinterpretations of visual information received by the retina are called visual illusions, which are known to occur in higher brain areas. However, whether they would be also processed in lower brain structures remains unknown, and how to explain the neuronal mechanisms underlying the motion after...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2006-12, Vol.577 (3), p.805-813 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Misinterpretations of visual information received by the retina are called visual illusions, which are known to occur in higher
brain areas. However, whether they would be also processed in lower brain structures remains unknown, and how to explain the
neuronal mechanisms underlying the motion after-effect is intensely debated. We show by extracellular recording that all motion-sensitive
neurons in the pigeon's pretectum respond similarly to real and illusory contours, and their preferred directions are identical
for both contours in unidirectional cells, whereas these directions are changed by 90 deg for real versus illusory contours in bidirectional cells. On the other hand, some pretectal neurons produce inhibitory (excitatory) after-responses
to cessation of prolonged motion in the preferred (null) directions, whose time course is similar to that of the motion after-effect
reported by humans. Because excitatory and inhibitory receptive fields of a pretectal cell overlap in visual space and possess
opposite directionalities, after-responses to cessation of prolonged motion in one direction may create illusory motion in
the opposite direction. It appears that illusory contours and motion could be detected at the earliest stage of central information
processing and processed in bottom-up streams, and that the motion after-effect may result from functional interactions of
excitatory and inhibitory receptive fields with opposite directionalities. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2006.120071 |