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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1, 1999, 19(15):6571-6587
The Contribution of Color to Motion Processing in Macaque Middle
Temporal Area
Alexander
Thiele1,
Karen R.
Dobkins2, and
Thomas D.
Albright1, 3
1 The Salk Institute for Biological Studies, San Diego,
California 92186, 2 Department of Psychology, University of
California San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093-0109, and
3 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, La Jolla, California
92093-0646
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ABSTRACT |
The chromatic properties of an image yield strong cues for object
boundaries and thus hold the potential to facilitate the detection of
object motion. The extent to which cortical motion detectors exploit
chromatic information, however, remains a matter of debate. To address
this further, we quantified the strength of chromatic input to
directionally selective neurons in the middle temporal area (MT) of
macaque cerebral cortex using an equivalent luminance contrast (EqLC)
paradigm. This paradigm, in which two sinusoidal gratings, one
heterochromatic and the other achromatic, are superimposed and moved in
opposite directions, allows the sensitivity of motion detectors to
heterochromatic stimuli to be quantified and expressed relative to the
benchmark of sensitivity for a luminance-defined stimulus.
The results of these experiments demonstrate that the chromatic
contrast in a moving red-green heterochromatic grating strongly influences directional responses in MT when the luminance contrast in
that same grating is relatively low; for such stimuli, EqLC is at least
5%. When luminance contrast is added to the heterochromatic grating,
however, EqLC wanes sharply and becomes negative ( 4%) when luminance contrast is sufficiently high (>17-23%). Thus, the
chromatic properties of an object appear to confer little or no benefit
to motion processing by MT neurons when sufficient luminance contrast
concurrently exists. These data support a simple model in which
chromatic motion processing in MT is almost exclusively determined by
magnocellular input. Additionally, a comparison of neuronal and
psychophysical data suggests that MT may not be the sole contributor to
the perceptual experience elicited by motion of heterochromatic
patterns, or that only a subset of MT neurons serve this function.
Key words:
luminance; chrominance; magnocellular; parvocellular; contrast; extrastriate
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INTRODUCTION |
The extent to which the primate
motion system uses information about the chromatic properties of an
image is an issue of long-standing debate. Early experiments suggested
a channeling of image information through several stages of the visual
hierarchy, such that color is encoded predominantly within
parvocellular and ventral cortical visual areas, whereas motion is
processed primarily by neurons of the magnocellular and dorsal cortical
stream (for review, see Merigan and Maunsell, 1993 ; Dobkins and
Albright, 1998 ). More recent anatomical, physiological, and
psychophysical evidence, however, indicates that this functional
dichotomy is less complete (Schiller and Malpelli, 1978 ; Cavanagh et
al., 1984 ; Derrington and Badcock, 1985 ; Mullen and Baker, 1985 ;
Lindsey and Teller, 1990 ; Maunsell et al., 1990 ; Cavanagh and Anstis,
1991 ; Ferrera et al., 1992 , 1994a ; Dobkins and Albright, 1993 ; Nealey
and Maunsell, 1994 ; Yoshioka et al., 1994 ; Gegenfurtner and Hawken,
1995 ; Sawatari et al., 1996 ; Croner and Albright, 1997 ).
Efforts to identify the substrate and mechanisms responsible for the
use of chromatic information by motion detectors have focused on the
middle temporal area (MT) of macaques. Contrary to the selective
channeling hypothesis, many MT neurons exhibit directional selectivity
when presented with isoluminant stimuli, although selectivity is
diminished relative to that for luminance-defined stimuli (Charles and
Logothetis, 1989 ; Saito et al., 1989 ; Dobkins and Albright, 1990 , 1994 ,
1998 ; Gegenfurtner et al., 1994 ).
Based on our previous results, we have argued that the observed
chromatic influences in MT can be accounted for by signals originating
in magnocellular (M) subcortical areas (Dobkins and Albright, 1994 ,
1998 ). Although M-cells are generally thought to possess broad-band
spectral sensitivity, there are two ways by which they convey
information about chromatic contrast. First, individual M-cells signal
the presence of chromatic contrast in isoluminant patterns without
regard for chromatic contrast polarity (Schiller and Colby, 1983 ;
Derrington et al., 1984 ; Lee et al., 1988 , 1989a ,b ; Kaiser et al.,
1990 ; Logothetis et al., 1990 ; Valberg et al., 1992 ; Dacey, 1996 ).
Second, because isoluminant points vary across the population of
M-cells, some cells will transmit a signal for any heterochromatic
luminance ratio selected (Logothetis et al., 1990 ).
Human psychophysical results, by contrast, are more indicative of
chromatic input to motion detectors arising in the parvocellular (P)
stream (Cavanagh and Anstis, 1991 ; Gegenfurtner and Hawken, 1995 ;
Stromeyer et al., 1995 ; Cropper and Derrington, 1996 ). In particular,
Cavanagh and Anstis (1991) used a paradigm that allowed the sensitivity
of motion detectors to heterochromatic stimuli to be quantified
relative to sensitivity to a luminance-defined standard. The resulting
metric was termed "equivalent luminance contrast" (EqLC). Cavanagh
and Anstis (1991) reported that EqLC for red-green gratings was
~10%, which was viewed as a rather potent contribution. Moreover,
sensitivity to chromatic contrast (as measured by EqLC) was independent
of the luminance contrast in the moving stimulus, as would be expected
from chromatically opponent (P-cell) input to motion detectors.
There are a number of possible explanations for the discrepant
interpretations, M-cell versus P-cell hypotheses, derived from the
aforementioned data. Among those worthy of consideration are (1) the
different results have arisen because physiological and psychophysical
data were obtained under different stimulus conditions; and (2) MT may
not be the primary neuronal substrate for perception of chromatically
defined motion, as suggested by Gegenfurtner et al. (1994) . The present
experiments were designed to address the first possibility directly
(and thereby indirectly explore the legitimacy of the second) through
use of a common design for neurophysiological and psychophysical
experiments. Specifically, both neuronal and perceptual
measures of EqLC for moving heterochromatic stimuli were obtained.
These estimates (1) precisely quantify chromatic sensitivity relative
to a luminance benchmark, (2) identify the relative contributions of
coexistent chromatic and luminance contrast (a common real-world
occurrence), and (3) bear on the relative validity of M- and P-cell hypotheses.
Our physiological findings demonstrate that the average sensitivity of
MT neurons to a heterochromatic stimulus depends heavily on the degree
of luminance contrast in the stimulus. This pattern of results can be
accounted for by a model that assumes M-cell input. These physiological
findings are in sharp contrast to our psychophysical confirmation of a
nearly independent relationship between EqLC and luminance contrast.
Confronted with this discrepancy, we consider the possibility that MT
may not be the sole contributor to the perceptual experience elicited
by motion of heterochromatic patterns or that only a small subset of MT
neurons, those that match human psychophysical performance, serve this function.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
General
The results reported herein were obtained from behavioral and
electrophysiological experiments in monkeys and psychophysical experiments conducted on human subjects. The stimulus configuration, display characteristics, viewing parameters, and behavioral
requirements were identical for monkeys and humans except where noted below.
Animal preparation and training
Animal subjects. Two adult rhesus monkeys
(Macaca mulatta, one male and one female) were used in this
study. Experimental protocols were approved by the Salk Institute
Animal Care and Use Committee, and conform to US Department of
Agriculture regulations and to the National Institutes of Health
guidelines for the humane care and use of laboratory animals.
Surgical preparation. Procedures for surgery and wound
maintenance have been described in detail elsewhere (Dobkins and
Albright, 1994 ). Briefly, a head post and a recording cylinder were
affixed to the skull using stainless steel rails and screws (Synthes) and dental acrylic. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans performed before surgery aided positioning of the recording chamber above MT (chambers were centered 17 mm lateral and 4 mm posterior to
the midsagittal and interaural plane). A search coil for measuring eye
position was surgically implanted in one eye using a variation of the
method of Judge et al. (1980) . The wire leads were connected to a
two-pin miniconnector affixed to the cranial implant using dental
acrylic. After surgical recovery and attainment of criterion performance on a visual fixation task (see below), a craniotomy was
performed to allow for electrode passage into area MT. All surgical
procedures were performed under sterile conditions, and animals were
given prophylactic antibiotics (three doses of 30 mg/kg Keflin during
surgery at 2 hr intervals) and postsurgical analgesics (buprenophorine,
0.03 mg/kg, i.m., every 12 hr for 3 d).
Behavioral task. Monkeys were seated in a standard primate
chair (Christ Instruments) with head post rigidly supported by the
frame of the chair. Animals were required to fixate a small (0.2°
diameter) fixation target in the presence of moving visual stimuli for
the duration of each trial (1700 msec). The target was presented on a
video display at a viewing distance of 60 cm. Eye position was
monitored (sampling rate, 60 Hz) using the magnetic scleral search coil
technique (Robinson, 1963 ). After successful fixation (i.e., the
maintenance of eye position within a 2° window centered on the
fixation target) throughout the trial, animals were given a small
(~0.15 cc) juice reward. When the animal broke fixation, the trial
was terminated, and a one second "time-out" ensued.
Electrophysiological recordings
Our procedures for recording extracellular action potentials
from isolated cortical neurons are routine and have been described in
detail elsewhere (Dobkins and Albright, 1994 ). The following criteria
were used to establish that recordings were from area MT: (1) a large
proportion of highly direction-selective cells, (2) retinotopic
organization consistent with known topography, (3) receptive field
sizes consistent with known dependence on visual field eccentricity,
and (4) electrode position relative to sulcal topography. In addition,
stereotaxic MRI scans obtained before surgery were used to further
confirm that our recordings were in a region of cortex consistent with
the typical location of area MT.
Apparatus
Visual stimuli were generated using a SGT Pepper graphics board
[Number Nine Computer; 640 × 480 pixel resolution, analog red-green-blue (RGB) output, 8 bits per gun) residing in a
Pentium-based personal computer. Stimuli were displayed on a 20 inch
analog RGB monitor (Sony GDM 2000TC; 60 Hz, noninterlaced). Stimuli
were generated under the charge of CORTEX 5.7 (Laboratory of
Neuropsychology, National Institute of Mental Health), which was also
used for data acquisition and behavioral control. Linearization of
monitor output was achieved for each of the three phosphors
independently (Watson et al., 1986 ).
Visual stimuli
General features. These experiments used moving
sinusoidal gratings for visual stimulation. The mean luminance of all
stimuli was 24 cd/m2, and they were presented on a
yellow background (24 cd/m2), with Commission
Internationale d'Eclairage (CIE) coordinates x = 0.492 and y = 0.446. All stimuli moved along one of
the cardinal or oblique axes and were viewed within a square aperture
rotated to align with the axis of motion. For neurophysiological
experiments, aperture width was 5° for neurons with foveal and
parafoveal receptive fields and 10° if the receptive field diameter
of a neuron was >5°. For human psychophysical experiments,
stimuli subtended 4.7° of visual angle. Three different stimulus
patterns were presented in the receptive field (RF) of each neuron
under study: (1) achromatic gratings, (2) heterochromatic gratings, and
(3) a stimulus created by spatial superimposition of achromatic and
heterochromatic gratings ("opposed-motion stimulus"). We begin by
describing the characteristics of these three patterns and the
procedures by which they were constructed. This is followed by a
description of the manner in which they were used to assess neuronal properties.
Achromatic gratings were generated by in-phase summation of
sinusoidal luminance modulations of the red and green phosphors of the
display monitor. The resultant grating was uniform in chrominance ("achromatic") and appeared yellow and black at modulation peaks. Luminance contrast was set by coincident adjustments of the amplitudes of the red and green components. Drifting achromatic gratings were used
to determine the preferred direction and spatiotemporal frequency for
each isolated neuron.
Heterochromatic gratings were produced by counterphase
summation of sinusoidal luminance modulations of the red and green phosphors. (The red and green component sinusoids were identical to
those used to create achromatic gratings.) The resulting grating was of
varying chrominance ("heterochromatic") and appeared red and green
at modulation peaks. Luminance contrast was varied by differentially
adjusting the mean luminances of the red and green component sinusoids
such that the mean luminance of the resultant heterochromatic stimulus
was constant across different stimulus conditions. Red and green
sinusoids were set at 100% modulation depth. This 100%, in essence,
represents 100% of the maximal chromatic contrast obtainable from the
monitor and is thus termed 100% instrument contrast.
Luminance contrast of the resultant hetero- chromatic grating is
expressed as: (Gmean Rmean)/(Gmean + Rmean). Using this metric, luminance
contrast can be either positive or negative, depending on which of the
two phosphor primaries is brighter with respect to human V
isoluminance. Positive contrast refers to green more luminous than red.
Likewise, negative contrast refers to red more luminous than green. The
luminance contrast in these gratings was verified by measuring
luminance as a function of spatial phase using a standard spot
photometer (PR-650, Photoresearch).
Opposed-motion stimuli consisted of an achromatic
(yellow-black) and a heterochromatic (red-green) grating,
superimposed and moving in opposite directions. A space-time plot of
this stimulus appears in Figure 1. The
specific configuration illustrated consists of a rightward-moving
heterochromatic grating superimposed on a leftward-moving achromatic
grating.

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Figure 1.
Space-time plot of the opposed-motion stimulus,
which was formed by superposition of oppositely moving achromatic and
heterochromatic sinusoids. The heterochromatic sinusoid was itself
produced by antiphase summation of sinusoidal modulations of red and
green display phosphors. The achromatic sinusoid was similarly
produced by in-phase summation of the same red and green modulations.
Each horizontal slice in the space-time plot
illustrates the phase relationship between achromatic and
heterochromatic sinusoids for a single stimulus frame. Each frame
illustrates two cycles of the compound stimulus (0 to 4 × ).
In this illustration achromatic and heterochromatic sinusoids were each
spatially displaced by /8 radians (in opposite directions) between
each temporal frame. The heterochromatic sinusoid in the example shown
moves rightward, whereas the achromatic sinusoid moves
leftward. (The yellow transition zones
between red and green are attributable to
reproduction and were not present in the actual stimulus.)
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Note that when heterochromatic and achromatic gratings were combined in
this manner to render an opposed-motion stimulus, the
effective luminance and chromatic contrasts of each
component grating were reduced by 50%, whereas the mean luminance was
twice the component luminance and was thus identical to the mean
background luminance of 24 cd/m2. (For example, the
addition of an achromatic grating possessing 0% chromatic and 50%
luminance contrast to a heterochromatic grating possessing 100%
chromatic contrast and 0% luminance contrast brings the
effective luminance contrast in the achromatic grating down to
25% and the effective chromatic contrast of the heterochromatic component down to 50%). To facilitate comparison with the single heterochromatic and achromatic gratings, we have thus chosen to describe the opposed-motion stimuli in terms of the effective contrasts
of their heterochromatic and achromatic components. In all experiments
described below, the chromatic (i.e., instrument) contrast
of the heterochromatic component started at 100% but was reduced to an
effective chromatic contrast of 50% when added to the achromatic grating.
Wave forms of the red and green guns were as follows for the
opposed-motion stimulus:
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(1)
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(2)
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where x = spatial position, t = time, fs = spatial frequency,
ft = temporal frequency, R and
G = mean luminances of red and green components of the
heterochromatic grating, respectively, L = mean
luminance of the achromatic grating (fixed at 12 cd/m2 for these experiments), and C = luminance contrast of the achromatic grating. The factors 0.41 and
0.59 were chosen to yield a relatively neutral yellow for the
achromatic stimulus with CIE coordinates x = 0.492 and
y = 0.446.
Cone modulations. For all stimuli, cone modulations were
computed from L and M cone excitations produced
by the "red" and "green" peaks of the heterochromatic gratings.
The latter were obtained by integrating the cross-product of stimulus
spectral output of these stimuli by the cone fundamentals of Stockman
et al. (1993) . Based on these procedures, we determined that 50% chromatic contrast in our red-green gratings produced modulations of
7.74 and 18.77% in the L and M cones,
respectively (at V isoluminance). Thus, the root mean square
(rms = square root of [(M2 + L2)/2]) of the independent modulations
of the L and M cones was 14.36%. For achromatic
gratings, rms cone contrast was simply equivalent to Michelson
luminance contrast.
Stimulus paradigms for assessment of neuronal selectivity
Direction and spatiotemporal frequency preferences.
The RF of each isolated MT neuron was mapped using a black bar moving on a homogenous yellow background, which was of the same luminance and
chromaticity as that used for all other measurements (see Visual
stimuli: General features). Direction tuning was then assessed using an
achromatic grating [0.7 cycles/° (cyc/°), 4 Hz, 100% Michelson
contrast] moving in each of eight different directions (along cardinal
and oblique axes) centered on the RF. Directions were presented in a
pseudo-random sequence for a total of five trials per stimulus type.
The direction of motion that yielded the largest response was termed
the "preferred" direction, and the direction opposite to the
preferred was termed the "null" direction. Strength of directional
bias along the preferred-null axis was quantified by a direction index
(DI): DI = 1 ND/PD, where
PD and ND are firing rate changes elicited by
motion in preferred and null directions, respectively. Neurons with a
DI < 0.5 were excluded from further study.
Preferred spatial and temporal frequencies were determined for each
directionally selective neuron by presenting gratings at 12 different
spatiotemporal frequency combinations moving in the preferred direction
(temporal frequencies, 1, 2, 4, or 8 Hz; spatial frequencies, 0.4, 0.7, or 1.4 cyc/°). The spatial and temporal frequency combination
yielding the largest response was used for all subsequent testing of
that neuron.
Neuronal isoluminance. We defined red-green neuronal
isoluminance to be the luminance contrast that elicited the smallest neuronal response to a red-green grating moving in the preferred direction. This value was determined for each MT neuron using a
procedure described previously (Dobkins and Albright, 1994 ). Briefly,
red-green heterochromatic gratings were presented at 11 different
luminance contrasts, ranging in equal intervals (4%) from 20% (red
more luminous than green) to +20% (green more luminous than red).
These stimuli were each moved in the preferred direction, and the
red-green luminance contrast yielding the minimal response was
identified. For subsequent EqLC experiments (see below), in which we
measured neuronal responses across a range of red-green luminance
contrasts, heterochromatic grating luminance contrast is expressed with
respect to this neuronal isoluminance point, not relative to
human V . For those cases in which no response minimum was found
(i.e., neuronal isoluminance could not be determined), heterochromatic
luminance contrast is expressed with respect to the mean red-green
isoluminant point of neurons sampled (this mean was determined
separately for each monkey).
Equivalent luminance contrast
Experimental design. The goal of these experiments
was to quantify the sensitivity of directionally selective MT neurons
to chromatic contrast. This goal was achieved using a procedure in which responses elicited by moving chromatically defined
patterns were "balanced" against those elicited by moving
luminance-modulated patterns. Neuronal sensitivity to the
luminance-modulated pattern thus provided a standard against which
sensitivity to chromatic contrast could be gauged, and the procedure
rendered sensitivity in units of luminance contrast, i.e., the EqLC.
For each MT neuron tested, EqLC was determined using the opposed-motion
stimulus described above, with one component moving in the preferred
direction and the other moving simultaneously in the null direction.
Three independent variables were manipulated: (1) luminance contrast of
the achromatic component, (2) luminance contrast of the heterochromatic component, and (3) directional polarity, such that the achromatic grating moved either in the preferred or null direction (owing to the
opposed-motion configuration, the heterochromatic grating always moved conversely).
In early phases of these experiments, two achromatic contrast values
were used (either 5 and 10 or 10 and 20%); in later phases, four
values were used (either 3, 6, 12, and 24 or 4, 8, 16, and 32%).
Luminance contrast of the heterochromatic component was varied through
nine different levels, ranging from red more luminous than green to
green more luminous than red through the isoluminant point of the cell
(the particular range of heterochromatic luminance contrasts depended
on the particular achromatic luminance contrast used). All conditions
were presented in pseudo-random order.
Sample data set. The computation of EqLC was a multistep
procedure that was applied to data collected using each achromatic luminance contrast value for each neuron studied. For clarity of
exposition, Figures 2 and
3 illustrate the application of our procedures to a subset of data obtained from a representative neuron
(the full collection of responses obtained from this neuron is
presented in Fig. 5 and described in Results). The data illustrated in
Figure 2 were obtained using a single achromatic contrast value. Neuronal responses are shown in the form of spike rasters and peristimulus histograms for each condition in a
matrix consisting of two directional polarities (rows) and nine
heterochromatic luminance contrasts (columns).

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Figure 2.
Neuronal responses to the opposed-motion stimulus.
Data are from a representative MT neuron, which illustrate neuronal
responses as a function of (1) luminance contrast in the
heterochromatic grating (columns) and (2) directional
polarity of the opposed-motion stimulus (rows). The
top row of rasters and peristimulus time histograms
(gray shaded) illustrates neuronal responses for
the directional-polarity condition in which the heterochromatic
component moved in the preferred direction (whereas achromatic
component moved simultaneously in the null direction). The
bottom row of rasters and histograms (black
outlined) illustrates responses to the corresponding luminance
conditions for the inverted directional polarity. Achromatic luminance
contrast was fixed at 16% for all conditions shown. Heterochromatic
luminance contrast was varied from red more luminous than green
(negative values on x-axis) to green more luminous than
red. Response onset is marked at the bottom of each
histogram. Stimulus duration was 1000 msec.
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Figure 3.
Determination of equivalent luminance contrast.
Mean activity levels (y-axis) derived from
neuronal responses shown in Figure 2 are plotted as a function of
heterochromatic luminance contrast (x-axis) and
directional polarity (circles,
asterisks). Responses obtained when the heterochromatic
component moved in the neuronal preferred direction are indicated by
the circles; corresponding responses obtained when the
achromatic component moved in the preferred direction are indicated by
asterisks. Achromatic luminance contrast was fixed at
16%. Motion "null points" were defined to be the heterochromatic
luminance contrast values for which the neuron lost sensitivity to
directional polarity. In practice, these null points can be identified
graphically by the intersections (arrows) of the two
Gaussian-fitted directional-polarity response functions. For this data
set, null points occurred at luminance contrasts of 21.6% (red more
luminous than green) and 14.8% (green more luminous than red). EqLC
was computed as the difference between (1) the average of the absolute
values of these null points and (2) the achromatic luminance contrast
used to construct the opposed-motion stimulus. EqLC thus reflects
sensitivity to the chromatic contrast in the stimulus calibrated in
units of luminance contrast.
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The top row of responses (gray histograms) in Figure
2 was obtained for the directional polarity in which the
heterochromatic component moved in the neuronal preferred direction,
whereas the achromatic component moved in the null direction. When
heterochromatic luminance contrast was high for this directional
polarity, either because red was far more luminous than green, or vice
versa, neuronal responses were quite large, reflecting the simple fact
that the dominant heterochromatic component moved in preferred
direction. Near isoluminance, however, responses were rather weak.
Owing to the stimulus configuration, the latter may be a consequence of
one or both of the following: (1) relative insensitivity to the motion
of isoluminant stimuli, and (2) response inhibition elicited by motion
of the achromatic grating in the null direction. The inhibitory
contribution may be more marked when the driving power of the
heterochromatic grating is small.
The bottom row of responses (white histograms) in Figure 2
was obtained for the converse directional polarity (i.e.,
heterochromatic component moved in null, whereas achromatic component
moved in the preferred direction). This condition yielded a
complimentary response pattern. Specifically, a strong response was
elicited when the heterochromatic grating was isoluminant, and this
response declined as the luminance contrast of the heterochromatic
grating was increased.
Modeling neuronal responses. The first step in computing
EqLC from a set of neuronal responses involved fitting the data by an
appropriate model. We chose a Gaussian model, which was applied as
follows. (The appropriateness of this model, as judged by "goodness of fit," is addressed below.) For each of the stimulus conditions presented in Figure 2, the mean activity level was calculated over a
1000 msec window, which began 50 msec after stimulus onset and ended 50 msec after stimulus offset. These activity levels are plotted
correspondingly in Figure 3 (i.e., two directional polarities and nine
heterochromatic luminance contrasts), along with SEs (some of which are
hidden by the symbols). Gaussians were then fitted to the set of
responses elicited by the ninecontrast levels, separately for the each
of the two directional polarities, using the following functions:
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(3)
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(4)
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The choice of Equation 3 versus 4 depended on directional
polarity, such that the former was used when the achromatic grating component moved in the preferred direction, and the latter was used
when it moved in the null direction. Here, a corresponds to
the minimum (maximum) of the tuning curve, b corresponds to response differential relative to the minimum (maximum), c
corresponds to width, and µ corresponds to the value of
heterochromatic luminance contrast yielding the response minimum (maximum).
The solid line in Figure 3 represents the fit to data
obtained when the heterochromatic component moved in the preferred
direction; the dashed line represents the fitted curve for
data obtained when the achromatic component moved in the preferred direction.
The appropriateness of the Gaussian model was evaluated for each data
set on the basis of maximum likelihood estimates of the fitted
parameters, which were obtained by minimizing 2 (Press
et al., 1992 ). In this procedure, 2 corresponds to the
sum of squared errors between model predictions and data, divided by
the SD of the experimental measurements. Because the SDs of neuronal
firing rate may be non-normally distributed, we minimized
2 by dividing by the SE. This procedural modification
yields more conservative estimates of goodness of fit. We used this
procedure to model a minimum of eight data sets [four achromatic
luminance contrast conditions × two directional-polarity
conditions] for each cell. Cells were excluded from further analysis
if the Q value (indicative of goodness of fit; Press et al.,
1992 ) for any data set obtained from a neuron was <0.01. This ensured
that reliable EqLCs could be derived.
Determining the motion null points. The luminance conditions
for which a neuron is equally sensitive to the achromatic and heterochromatic components of the opposed motion stimulus are defined
by loss of neuronal sensitivity to the directional polarity of the
stimulus (i.e., when equivalent responses are elicited regardless of
whether the heterochromatic or achromatic component of the stimulus
moves in the preferred direction). We term these luminance conditions
the "motion null points," and they were derived from the
intersections (Fig. 3, arrows) of the curves fitted to the
responses obtained using the two directional polarities. As for the
data in Figure 3, under most (but not all; see Results) conditions, we
observed two null points for each data set: one to each side of
isoluminance (denoted as 0% luminance contrast). Intuitively, this
simply means that a null point can be obtained when red is brighter
than green and vice versa.
Computing equivalent luminance contrast. EqLC was computed
as the difference between the average null point (the mean of the absolute values of the two heterochromatic luminance contrasts eliciting a null) and the luminance contrast of the opposing achromatic grating:
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(5)
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In Equation 5, Cachro corresponds to
achromatic luminance contrast; Chetchro1 and
Chetchro2 refer to the two heterochromatic luminance contrasts that yielded motion nulls. The EqLC value obtained
by this procedure is the average luminance contrast difference between
the opposing heterochromatic and achromatic gratings that renders a
motion null and is thus a calibrated measure of neuronal sensitivity to
the heterochromatic component.
The EqLC procedure illustrated for this sample data set was repeated
for additional data sets from each neuron studied, which were obtained
using preselected values of achromatic luminance contrast. This allowed
us to investigate whether EqLC varies as a function of achromatic
luminance contrast. For those neurons tested with four achromatic
luminance contrast values, this protocol resulted in 96 conditions (64 EqLC conditions, 32 single gratings). We attempted to record 10 trials
per condition. Neurons with as few as five trials per condition were
included in our sample.
Human psychophysical experiments
Our quantification of the sensitivity of MT neurons to moving
heterochromatic patterns was primarily motivated by a desire to
determine whether this neuronal sensitivity could account for perceptual sensitivity to such stimuli. Although there have
been numerous reports of the sensitivity of human subjects to moving heterochromatic patterns, including one study that used an
opposed-motion stimulus (Cavanagh and Anstis, 1991 ), we thought it
critical that the neuronal-perceptual comparison be made on the basis
of results obtained under conditions that were as similar as possible.
We therefore measured EqLC in two human observers. In these
psychophysical experiments, all stimulus conditions and display methods
were identical to those used in our MT study (see above), with the
exception that we obtained data for only one spatiotemporal frequency;
values used (0.7 cyc/°, 4 Hz) reflected the preference of the
majority of MT neurons sampled. Stimuli were viewed from a distance of
53 cm, and they were positioned within a square (4.7 × 4.7°)
window that was centered 3.7° eccentric to the point of fixation (the
average receptive field eccentricity for our sample of MT neurons)
along the horizontal meridian in the right visual hemifield. All
stimuli were located at the center of the display monitor; visual field
location was determined by appropriate positioning of the 0.2° square
fixation on the display monitor.
Three independent variables were manipulated systematically: (1)
luminance contrast of the achromatic component, (2) luminance contrast
of the heterochromatic component, and (3) directional polarity
(stimulus motion was along the horizontal axis). Luminance contrast of
the achromatic component was pseudo-randomly selected from one of five
predetermined values (10, 15, 20, 25, and 30%). Luminance contrast of
the heterochromatic component was varied through 19 different levels in
a pseudo-random sequence (the particular range of heterochromatic
luminance contrasts depended on the particular achromatic luminance
contrast used). Directional polarity of the opposed-motion stimulus was
varied randomly across trials, and psychophysical data were averaged
across the two polarity values.
Subjects were required to fixate for the duration of each stimulus
presentation. Eye position was monitored during initial phases of
testing, and we confirmed that fixation was accurate (±1°) and
direction of eye movement was not systematically related to stimulus
conditions or the behavioral choice. These observations are consistent
with previous reports that human subjects are capable of reliable
fixation under similar stimulus conditions (Murphy et al., 1975 ).
Stimuli were presented in a two-alternative forced-choice paradigm in
which the dependent variable was perceived direction of motion, as
assessed by a key press at the end of each trial. For each of the 19 heterochromatic luminance contrasts, the proportion of trials in which
motion was perceived in favor of the direction of motion of the
achromatic grating was determined. These data were fitted with Weibull
functions. As for neuronal data, psychophysical null points
corresponded to the loss of sensitivity to directional polarity, which
was manifested in this paradigm by chance (50%) performance on the
direction discrimination task. Two null points were generally seen for
each block of 19 heterochromatic luminance contrasts: one for a
condition in which green was more luminous that red and a second when
red was more luminous than green. EqLC was derived using Equation 5.
The same procedure was repeated for each achromatic luminance contrast
such that a total of five EqLC values were obtained from each subject.
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RESULTS |
Basic response properties
Data from 95 MT neurons in two monkeys were included in this
study. The receptive field centers, direction preferences, direction indices, and spatiotemporal tuning of these neurons are shown in Figure
4. The vast majority of cells possessed
parafoveal receptive fields, with a mean eccentricity of 3.7 ± 1.6 ° (Fig. 4A). The distribution of preferred
directions was approximately uniform, and the mean direction index
across neurons was 1.06 ± 0.56 (Fig. 4B). The
distribution of preferred spatiotemporal frequencies (Fig.
4C) demonstrates that, on average, MT neurons preferred temporal frequencies in the range of 4 and 8 Hz rather than 1 and 2 Hz
(mean, 4.9 Hz). The distribution of preferred spatial frequency, by
contrast, was relatively uniform (mean, 0.81 cyc/°).

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Figure 4.
General response characteristics of the sample
neurons. A, Receptive field location and diameter for
each of the neurons. The x-axis represents the azimuth
of the visual field (degrees); the y-axis represents
elevation. The majority of receptive field centers were located within
5° of the center of gaze. B, Distribution of direction
indices and preferred directions of motion (inset). Most
cells were highly directional, and the distribution of preferred
directions was uniform. C, Distribution of preferred
spatiotemporal frequencies. Bar height indicates the
number of cells as a function of preferred temporal
(x-axis) and spatial (y-axis)
frequency.
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Equivalent luminance contrast
Representative neuronal responses
A very consistent pattern of responses to the opposed-motion
stimulus was observed across the population of cells tested. Data from
a representative neuron are illustrated in Figure
5. This figure contains the complete
collection of responses to the opposed motion stimulus obtained from
the neuron presented above (see Materials and Methods and Figs. 2, 3 where the responses were used to illustrate procedures for computing
EqLC). The data were obtained using four different achromatic luminance
contrasts (4, 8, 16, and 32%; Fig. 5A-D), nine
heterochromatic luminance contrasts (columns within each
panel), and two directional polarities (rows within each
panel).

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Figure 5.
EqLC response pattern I: characteristic response
pattern of an MT neuron to the opposed-motion stimulus. The EqLC for
this neuron was determined at four different luminance contrasts (4, 8, 16, and 32%). The four quadrants (A-D)
illustrate data obtained under these four conditions. Each quadrant
contains two rows of cumulative histograms (bottom) and
a graph of mean responses (top). The top gray
shaded row of histograms in each quadrant shows neuronal
activity obtained for one of the two directional-polarity conditions:
heterochromatic component moved in the preferred direction. The
bottom row of histograms shows neuronal activity for the
opposite directional polarity: achromatic component moved in the
preferred direction. Within each row of histograms, data are shown for
each of nine different values of heterochromatic luminance contrast
( 32 to 32% in 8% increments; negative contrast values correspond to
red more luminous than green and vice versa for positive values). Mean
responses are plotted at top. Data from each of the two
directional-polarity conditions have been fitted with a Gaussian. The
gray line and symbols represent results
for the condition in which the heterochromatic component moved in the
neuronal preferred direction. The black line and
symbols represent results for the condition in which the
achromatic component moved in the preferred direction. (Note that when
either component moved in the preferred direction, the other moved
simultaneously in the anti-preferred direction.) For this neuron, EqLC
decreased with increasing luminance contrast, becoming effectively
negative at high contrast. This inverse relationship was characteristic
of the vast majority of MT neurons studied. See Results for details.
Calibration (C, bottom) indicates
stimulus onset and period of stimulus presentation (1000 msec).
Prestimulus time was 500 msec.
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At 4% achromatic luminance contrast (Fig. 5A), the two
directional-polarity curves failed to intersect, reflecting the
dominance of the heterochromatic grating under all conditions tested.
Because no null points were measured, we can only place a lower
boundary on our estimate, such that EqLC 4% (bounded by the
achromatic luminance contrast used for these data). When achromatic
luminance contrast was increased, EqLC declined. For achromatic
luminance contrast values of 8% (Fig. 5B), 16% (Fig.
5C), and 32% (Fig. 5D), the two
directional-polarity curves intersected at two points, one on either
side of the neurons isoluminance point. From these data, EqLC was
computed to be 1.5, 2.2%, and 3.3% for achromatic luminance
contrast values of 8, 16, and 32%, respectively, indicative of a
lessening influence of the chromatic stimulus component on the cell response.
We were able to determine EqLC for 95 of 125 (76%) of the cells that
were tested with either two or four different achromatic luminance
contrasts. For the remaining neurons, EqLC could not be determined,
owing to at least one of the following reasons: (1) all values of
achromatic luminance contrast used were insufficient to null the
heterochromatic component; (2) directional selectivity (DI > 0.5)
was not present at low luminance contrast; (3) no responses were
elicited by any of the opposed-motion stimuli; or (4) the Gaussian fit
had to be rejected. When a neuron failed to exhibit null points at a
subset of achromatic luminance contrasts (as was the case for the
conditions illustrated in Fig. 5A), we determined a lower
boundary estimate of EqLC. In such cases, EqLC was lower-bounded by the
larger of (1) the value of EqLC obtained for the next higher level of
achromatic luminance contrast used or (2) the value of the achromatic
luminance contrast for which no null point was observed.
Population data: general characteristics
To obtain a better impression of overall activity in our neuronal
sample in response to the opposed-motion stimulus, we plotted the
average neuronal response as a function of heterochromatic luminance
contrast separately for each achromatic luminance contrast (Fig.
6A). Individual
neuronal isoluminant points were aligned before averaging across the
population, such that the x-axis reflects "relative"
luminance contrast (with respect to the neural isoluminant point) in
the heterochromatic grating. The population data were fitted with the
same functions used to fit data from single neurons (Eqs. 3 and 4). The
data shown in Figure 6A are from 20 neurons, which
were selected for this analysis because all were tested under identical
luminance contrast values. (Although additional data are omitted from
this figure for clarity of illustration, a qualitatively and
quantitatively similar pattern of results was observed for neurons
tested under different luminance contrast values.) As was the case for
the representative neuron illustrated in Figure 5, responses were
dominated by the heterochromatic grating when achromatic luminance
contrast was low (<8%; Fig. 6A, top panels). This
population heterochromatic dominance indicates that the degree of
red-green input to MT neurons is quite strong and even overrides
luminance contrast signals up to at least 4%. As for single-neuron
data, the population EqLC decreased with increasing luminance contrast
in the achromatic grating. This finding indicates that processing of
moving stimuli defined by luminance and chromatic contrast is slightly
less effective compared with stimuli defined by luminance contrast
only. However, the former are still effectively processed by the motion
system.

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Figure 6.
Average MT activity: average neuronal activity as
a function of achromatic contrast is shown for a sample of neurons
tested under identical stimulus conditions (n = 20). A, EqLC was determined for each neuron in this
subsample using an opposed-motion stimulus constructed from each of
four achromatic gratings, which differed solely in the amplitude of
luminance contrast (4, 8, 16, and 32%). The four quadrants illustrate
data obtained under these four conditions, which have been averaged
over all 20 cells. Each quadrant contains a plot of mean responses as a
function of heterochromatic luminance contrast, which ranged from 32
to 32% in 8% increments. Error bars indicate SE for each data point.
The two curves in each plot (gray and
black) have been fitted to data from each of the two
directional-polarity conditions. Motion null points for each
achromatic luminance contrast are defined by loss of sensitivity to
directional polarity and are identifiable graphically by intersections
of the two directional-polarity curves. Average EqLC values computed
from these null points decreased with increasing luminance contrast,
becoming negative at high contrast. (B) Our
experiments subsampled the relevant space of achromatic and
heterochromatic luminance contrasts. The regularity of our data allows
one to predict EqLC for any combination of contrast values within this
space by (1) computing the difference between the two
directional-polarity average response functions (from
A) for each achromatic luminance contrast and (2)
interpolating between computed difference curves along the dimension of
achromatic luminance contrast. The resulting directional-polarity
difference values (gray scale) have been plotted
as a function of heterochromatic and achromatic luminance contrast,
which are represented along the x- and
y-axes, respectively. Dark shading
indicates that the heterochromatic component dominated the response,
whereas light shading indicates that the achromatic
component dominated. The two converging diagonals (dashed black
lines) within this space indicate points of identical luminance
contrast for achromatic and heterochromatic components. The
solid white line is the nulling contour (response
difference, 0), which indicates conditions that will render the average
MT neuron insensitive to the directional polarity of the opposed-motion
stimulus. Inasmuch as the nulling contour deviates from the
same-contrast diagonals, the average neuron exhibits sensitivity to the
chromatic contrast in the stimulus. Likewise, from the difference
between these diagonals and the nulling contour measured along either
axis, the plot allows one to predict EqLC for any set of conditions
within this space. See legend to Figure 5 and Results for
details.
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The data we have obtained using the opposed-motion stimulus are a
subsample from the space of possible achromatic and heterochromatic luminance contrast combinations. Motion null points (hence EqLC) for
any combination of heterochromatic and achromatic stimuli within this
space can be predicted from our data by (1) computing the difference
between the two directional-polarity average response functions (from
Fig. 6A) for each achromatic luminance contrast and
(2) interpolating between computed difference curves along the
dimension of achromatic luminance contrast. The outcome of this process
is illustrated in Figure 6B. The heterochromatic and
achromatic luminance contrast dimensions are represented along the
x- and y-axes, respectively. The two converging
diagonals (dashed black lines) within this space indicate
points of identical luminance contrast for achromatic and
heterochromatic components. The directional-polarity response
difference is indicated by a gray scale (right
panel). Darker intensities indicate that the heterochromatic component dominated the response, whereas lighter intensities indicate that the achromatic component dominated. The
solid white line is the nulling contour (response
difference, 0), which indicates conditions that will render the average
MT neuron insensitive to the directional polarity of the opposed-motion stimulus. Inasmuch as the nulling contour deviates from the
same-contrast diagonals, the average neuron exhibits sensitivity to the
chromatic contrast in the stimulus. Likewise, from the difference
between these diagonals and the nulling contour measured along either axis, the plot allows one to predict EqLC for any set of conditions within this space.
Relationship between EqLC and luminance contrast in the
achromatic grating
The representative neuron in Figure 5 and the subset of population
data illustrated in Figure 6 reveal a consistent tendency for EqLC to
decline with increasing achromatic luminance contrast. Indeed, this
relationship was observed in 79 of 95 (83.1%) of the sampled cells.
The EqLC of 13 of the remaining 16 cells remained approximately
constant for different luminance contrasts [range tested, 10 and 20%
(n = 5 of 35); 3-24% (n = 4 of 18);
and 4-32% (n = 4 of 42)] and was observed within the
range of ~2-6% for all achromatic stimulus conditions used. An
example of such a neuron is shown in Figure
7. This MT neuron was tested at
achromatic luminance contrasts of 4, 8, 16, and 32%, and the
respective EqLCs were ~4, 6.8, 4.1, and 3.5%. Thus, although it
exhibited the same response characteristics to the opposed-motion
stimulus as the neuron illustrated in Figure 5, EqLC remained
relatively constant across values of achromatic luminance contrast. For
the remaining three cells, EqLC increased slightly as a function of
luminance contrast.

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Figure 7.
EqLC response pattern II: example of an MT neuron
for which EqLC was found to be independent of luminance contrast. The
EqLC for this neuron was determined using an opposed-motion stimulus
constructed from each of four achromatic gratings, which differed
solely in the amplitude of luminance contrast (4, 8, 16, and 32%). The
four quadrants of the figure illustrate data obtained under these four
conditions. For this neuron, EqLC was ~4% for all achromatic
luminance contrasts tested. Plotting conventions are as in Figure 5.
Also see legends to Figures 2, 3, and 5, Materials and Methods, and
Results for details.
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A previous report (Gegenfurtner and Hawken, 1995 ) provided evidence
that chromatic sensitivity to motion is substantially different for
foveal versus parafoveal presentation. In view of this evidence, we
considered the possibility that neurons with relatively invariant
values of EqLC have more foveally located receptive fields than those
for which EqLC declined with increasing luminance contrast. The mean
eccentricity of neurons expressing relatively invariant values of EqLC
was 3.2°, whereas that of neurons for which EqLC declined with
increasing luminance contrast was 3.9°. This difference was not
significant (p = 0.131, t test), suggesting that the EqLC-luminance relationship is unrelated to the
previously reported functional distinction associated with receptive
field eccentricity.
A more complete picture of the observed relationships between EqLC and
achromatic luminance contrast for individual neurons can be seen in
Figure 8. Plotted is the EqLC as a
function of luminance contrast (for the subset of neurons for which a
complete set of data were obtained at each of the following achromatic contrasts: 4, 8, 16, and 32%). Cells were placed in one of two categories based on the observed relationship between EqLC and achromatic contrast. The first category (Fig. 8, left)
consists of those cells for which EqLC declined with increasing
luminance contrast. Neurons were placed in this class if the EqLC
obtained at the highest luminance contrast was no more than 60% of
that obtained at the lowest luminance contrast. The second category (Fig. 8, right) consisted of those cells for which EqLC was
relatively invariant over changes in luminance contrast.

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Figure 8.
EqLC of individual neurons as a function of
luminance contrast. A, Neurons that showed a decline of
EqLC (i.e., their EqLC at the highest achromatic contrast was no more
than 60% of the EqLC at the lowest achromatic contrast). The EqLCs at
different achromatic luminance contrast for a given neuron are
connected by straight lines. Plotted are those neurons
for which EqLC was determined at 4, 8, 16, and 32% achromatic
luminance contrast. B, Neurons that did not show a
systematic decrease of EqLC as luminance contrast increased. As in
A, only neurons whose EqLC was determined at 4, 8, 16, and 32% achromatic luminance contrast are plotted.
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For further evaluation, we provide in Table
1 an inventory of the number of neurons
tested at different achromatic contrasts, the number of neurons for
which EqLC could be determined, as well as the mean, SE, and median
EqLC.
To evaluate the conjoint behavior of the whole-cell sample, EqLC was
averaged across all 95 neurons studied and plotted as a function of
luminance contrast in the achromatic grating, separately for each of
two monkeys (Fig. 9A). For
both animals, mean EqLC was ~5% when achromatic contrast was low
(<10%), decreased with increasing achromatic contrast amplitude, and
became negative when achromatic contrast exceeded ~17-23%. The
results from a Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA revealed that the decline of EqLC
was significant for both monkeys (p < 0.0001).

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Figure 9.
Population EqLC: inverse relationship between
average EqLC and actual luminance contrast in the opposed-motion
stimulus. A, Mean EqLC ± SE are plotted as a
function of luminance contrast amplitude in the achromatic component of
the opposed-motion stimulus. Data are averaged and plotted separately
for the two monkeys. Average EqLC declined in an approximately linear
manner as luminance contrast was increased. Although significantly
positive at 3-5% contrast (i.e., when the achromatic component was
small), average EqLC became effectively negative when luminance
contrast exceeded 17-20%. B, Data from
A have been replotted as a function of luminance
contrast in the heterochromatic grating. This was achieved by
subtracting EqLC from achromatic luminance contrast. Replotting the
data in this manner is advantageous, because it allows one to
appreciate more intuitively the variable relationship between neuronal
sensitivity to the chromatic (as expressed by EqLC,
y-axis) and luminance (x-axis) components
of a moving heterochromatic pattern. Note that the negative luminance
contrast values plotted on the x-axis do not indicate
"red more luminous than green" (as was the case for Figs. 2, 3,
5-7). Rather, negative values occurred simply because the
heterochromatic component often dominated the response when the
achromatic component was of low contrast (i.e., no null points were
exhibited; e.g., see Fig. 5A). In such cases, EqLC was
estimated by a lower boundary, as described in Materials and Methods.
Negative heterochromatic luminance contrast values were thus assigned
when the procedure yielded EqLCs that were larger than the achromatic
test contrast. In both A and B, error
bars are not plotted for low luminance contrasts ( 10%), because the
heterochromatic grating generally dominated the neuronal response under
these conditions, and no null points were observed. In this case EqLC
was approximated as the achromatic luminance contrast or the highest
EqLC obtained for this neuron.
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For the foregoing analyses we computed and expressed EqLC as a function
of the luminance contrast in the opposing achromatic grating. To fully
appreciate the contribution of color to motion processing, one would
also like to know how chromatic motion sensitivity, as assessed by
EqLC, depends on luminance contrast in the same moving component. A
simple recalculation allowed us to express our data in this manner.
Recall that EqLCs were empirically determined as the difference between
the luminance contrasts in achromatic and heterochromatic components
that gave rise to motion nulls (i.e., EqLC = achromatic luminance
contrast heterochromatic luminance
contrastnull). Therefore, subtracting EqLC from
achromatic luminance contrast yields heterochromatic luminance contrast
for the same EqLC. These values are plotted in Figure 9B.
The pattern of results indicates that the contribution of red-green
chromatic contrast to the neuronal response to a moving pattern is
heavily dependent on, and inversely proportional to, the degree of
luminance contrast in the same pattern. When luminance contrast is low, red-green chromatic contrast exerts a significant positive influence over the neuronal response. When luminance contrast is relatively high
(more than ~15%), coincident red-green chromatic contrast is of
little consequence or may actually have a negative effect on
sensitivity to the moving pattern.
Relationship between EqLC and preferred spatial and
temporal frequency
It has been shown previously that psychophysically
determined EqLC in human subjects varies significantly as a function of temporal and spatial frequency (Cavanagh and Anstis, 1991 ). The range
of spatial and temporal frequencies investigated in this study is a
superset of those investigated by Cavanagh and Anstis (1991) , and
therefore this is an additional parameter that allows us to compare
psychophysical and neuronal data. Mean EqLC is plotted in Figure
10A as a function of
achromatic luminance contrast (x-axis) and temporal
frequency (individual curves) for neurons tested at four
different achromatic contrasts. (Data from neurons preferring 1 and 2 Hz have been pooled, because there were relatively few neurons
selective for these low frequencies). A two-way ANOVA was used
separately for each achromatic luminance contrast to detect
dependencies of EqLC on temporal frequency (factor 1), and spatial
frequency (factor 2). For each temporal frequency, the EqLC was found
to decrease with increasing luminance contrast in the achromatic
grating. No relationship between temporal frequency and EqLC was
detected (p > 0.05).

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Figure 10.
Dependence of EqLC on temporal and spatial
frequency (tested with a 2-factor ANOVA: factor one, temporal
frequency; factor two, spatial frequency). A,
Relationship between EqLC and preferred temporal frequency. EqLC is
plotted as a function of achromatic luminance contrast in the
opposed-motion stimulus, separately for cells of different preferred
temporal frequencies. Average EqLC values were similar and decreased
with increasing luminance contrast at similar rates for all temporal
frequencies tested. Neurons that preferred temporal frequencies of 1 and 2 Hz were pooled to increase this data set. The EqLC was
independent on temporal frequency (p > 0.05). B, Relationship between EqLC and preferred
spatial frequency. EqLC is plotted as a function of achromatic
luminance contrast in the opposed-motion stimulus, separately for cells
that preferred each of three different spatial frequencies. Although
EqLC values decreased with increasing luminance contrast at similar
rates, the average values were significantly smaller for cells that
preferred the highest spatial frequency tested
(p < 0.05). For both A and
B, note that EqLC was only measured for the single
spatiotemporal frequency determined to be preferred through preliminary
testing (see Materials and Methods). As a result, it is impossible to
determine whether the significant effects observed in B
indicate that (1) all sampled neurons with higher spatial frequency
preferences exhibit less-positive sensitivity to chromatic contrast, or
(2) all sampled neurons exhibit less-positive sensitivity to chromatic
contrast when tested at higher spatial frequencies.
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Mean EqLC is plotted in Figure 10B as a function of
achromatic luminance contrast (x-axis) for neurons tested at
different spatial frequencies. As seen for the temporal frequency data, a decrease in EqLC with increasing achromatic luminance contrast was
observed for all spatial frequencies. In contrast to temporal frequency
data, the ANOVA revealed a significant dependence of EqLC on spatial
frequency (p < 0.05) at all achromatic
luminance contrasts. EqLCs were highest for neurons that preferred 0.7 cyc/° and lowest for neurons that preferred 1.4 cyc/°. Post
hoc paired comparisons (Tukey's test) revealed that EqLCs for
neurons preferring 0.4 and 0.7 cyc/° did not differ from one another,
but both were significantly different (p < 0.05) from EqLC for neurons that preferred 1.4 cyc/°. Qualitatively
similar results were obtained for neurons recorded with only two
achromatic contrasts i.e., EqLCs were lowest for neurons that
preferred 1.4 cyc/° although the effect did not reach significance.
Because EqLC was only measured for the single spatiotemporal frequency
determined to be preferred through preliminary testing (see Materials
and Methods), the analysis presented here confounds preferred and
tested frequency conditions. Because of the preferred-tested confound,
it is impossible to determine from these data whether (1) all sampled
neurons with higher spatial frequency preferences exhibit less
sensitivity to chromatic contrast or (2) all sampled neurons exhibit
less sensitivity to chromatic contrast when tested at higher spatial
frequencies. Both are intriguing possibilities with important
mechanistic implications and will require further study.
Psychophysical estimates of equivalent luminance contrast
The observed decline of EqLC as a function of luminance contrast
for MT neurons was somewhat unexpected, because Cavanagh and Anstis
(1991) reported that psychophysically determined values of EqLC for
human subjects were primarily independent of luminance contrast. There
are a number of possible explanations for this difference, which
include (1) the use of somewhat different stimulus configurations
(e.g., spatial and temporal frequency, eccentricity, and size), (2) a
species difference (human vs macaque), and (3) the hypothesis that MT
accounts for this perceptual phenomenon may be invalid. The first of
these, stimulus differences, is easy to address experimentally, and we
did so by determining the psychophysical EqLCs of two human subjects
(A.T. and a naïve subject M.M.) using stimulus conditions that
were as similar as possible (see Materials and Methods) to those used
for our studies of single neurons in macaque. Psychophysical results
are plotted in Figure 11. For both subjects, EqLC was in the range of 2-3% for all achromatic luminance contrasts tested.

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Figure 11.
Human psychophysical EqLC as a function of
luminance contrast for two human subjects. EqLC was determined using
stimuli of 0.7 cyc/° spatial and 4 Hz temporal frequency. Stimulus
size was 4.7° in diameter, and stimuli were centered 3.7° to the
right of center of gaze. EqLC was primarily independent of luminance
contrast for both subjects. Minimum EqLC was 1.43; maximum EqLC was
3.5%.
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In marked contrast to our neuronal data, psychophysically determined
EqLC did not decline with increasing achromatic luminance contrast.
This psychophysical result is qualitatively consistent with previous
reports from Cavanagh and Anstis (1991) , which leads us to discount
explanations for the neuronal and perceptual discrepancy that are based
on simple stimulus differences. We will consider other possible
explanations for the discrepancy in some detail in Discussion.
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DISCUSSION |
The results from these experiments confirm that MT neurons exhibit
directionally selective responses to heterochromatic (red-green) moving patterns. Our results, moreover, calibrate the strength of this
chromatic sensitivity by referring it directly to a luminance benchmark. Doing so has enabled us to assess the degree to which chromatic sensitivity depends on the luminance contrast in a moving pattern and has facilitated comparisons between neuronal and perceptual sensitivity.
We will compare our results with those obtained from previous
physiological and psychophysical studies. Additionally we will consider
the degree to which our results can be accounted for by magnocellular
versus parvocellular inputs. Before proceeding, however, we first
evaluate potential confounding factors and attempt to discount the
possibility that they have contributed to the observed effects.
Potential confounding factors
Because of chromatic aberration of the lens, colors intended to be
isoluminant can be rendered nonisoluminant in the retinal image. This
artifactual contrast is minimal for gratings <1.0 cyc/° but
potentially troublesome for higher spatial frequencies (Flitcroft,
1989 ; Cavanagh and Anstis, 1991 ). It is thus possible that artifactual
contrast was present for our 1.4 cyc/° gratings, thereby increasing
the apparent driving power of the heterochromatic stimulus. Were this
true, EqLC should be largest at this frequency. This prediction is in
direct opposition to the pattern observed (Fig. 10). Thus, we argue
that chromatic aberration was not a significant confound.
There are a number of other ways in which isoluminant stimuli might
create luminance contrast signals in the eye. These include rod
intrusion (Mullen, 1991 ) and inhomogeneities in the degree of macular
pigment (Stabell and Stabell, 1980 ) or ratios of L:M cones (e.g.,
Nerger and Cicerone, 1992 ). As we have noted previously (Dobkins and
Albright, 1993 , 1994 ), luminance signals rendered by such factors are
unlikely to explain motion perception or directionally selective MT
responses at red-green isoluminance.
Chromatic input to MT: electrophysiological studies
Previous experiments have shown that MT neurons are sensitive to
the motion of heterochromatic (red-green) patterns (Charles and
Logothetis, 1989 ; Saito et al., 1989 ; Dobkins and Albright, 1990 , 1994 ;
Gegenfurtner et al., 1994 ; Dobkins et al., 1998 ; Croner and Albright,
1999 ). Two studies, in particular, have attempted to quantify the
strength of this sensitivity.
Dobkins and Albright (1994 |