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J Neurosci ; 22(21): 9530-40, 2002 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12417677

ABSTRACT

Microstimulation of direction columns in the middle temporal visual area (MT, or V5) provides a powerful tool for probing the relationship between cortical physiology and visual motion perception. In the current study we obtained "veridical" reports of perceived motion from rhesus monkeys by permitting a continuous range of possible responses that mapped isomorphically onto a continuous range of possible motion directions. In contrast to previous studies, therefore, the animals were freed from experimenter-imposed "categories" that typify forced choice tasks. We report three new findings: (1) MT neurons with widely disparate preferred directions can cooperate to shape direction estimates, inconsistent with a pure "winner-take-all" read-out algorithm and consistent with a distributed coding scheme like vector averaging, whereas neurons with nearly opposite preferred directions seem to compete in a manner consistent with the winner-take-all hypothesis, (2) microstimulation can influence direction estimates even when paired with the most powerful motion stimuli available, and (3) microstimulation effects can be elicited when a manual response (instead of our standard oculomotor response) is used to communicate the perceptual report.


Subject(s)
Judgment/physiology , Motion Perception/physiology , Temporal Lobe/physiology , Visual Cortex/physiology , Algorithms , Animals , Brain Mapping , Electric Stimulation/methods , Fixation, Ocular/physiology , Macaca mulatta , Microelectrodes , Models, Neurological , Neurons/physiology , Photic Stimulation/methods , Reproducibility of Results , Saccades/physiology
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