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Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 10, 3880-3888, Copyright © 1990 by Society for Neuroscience


ARTICLE

The neural site of binocular rivalry relative to the analysis of motion in the human visual system

H Wiesenfelder and R Blake
Department of Psychology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee 37240.

Neural processing is disrupted during suppression phases of binocular rivalry, as evidenced by the temporary invisibility of an otherwise complex, high-contrast visual stimulus. This paper investigates the locus of this disruption relative to the processing of information about image motion. In one experiment, observers tracked binocular rivalry between a stationary textured field and a plaid composed of 2 drifting cosine gratings, with the angle between components varied to produce different pattern speeds. (Plaid speed is given by the ratio of the component speed to the cosine of the angle between the 2 directions of motion.) Predominance of the moving plaid increased with pattern speed, even though the speed of the individual components remained constant. Control measures verified that this influence of plaid speed was not attributable to specific component orientations. Information about coherent motion influences the rivalry process, implying that the site of coherent motion analysis, presumably the middle temporal area (MT), received input during dominance phases of rivalry. A second experiment investigated the effect of suppression on the processing of complex, nonlinear motion. Observers tracked rivalry phases for a rotating spiral, then indicated the duration of the subsequently perceived spiral aftereffect (SAE) for both rivalry and nonrivalry conditions. The SAE was reduced when adaptation occurred under the rivalry condition, with aftereffect duration proportional to the total duration of spiral visibility during adaptation. Earlier work places rivalry after the site of the linear motion aftereffect, and the present results show that rivalry suppression occurs prior to the site of spiral motion processing.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)




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Copyright 2008 by Society for Neuroscience ONLINE ISSN: 1529-2401
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