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The Journal of Neuroscience, December 15, 2000, 20(24):9310-9319
Neural Responses in the Retinotopic Representation of the Blind
Spot in the Macaque V1 to Stimuli for Perceptual Filling-In
Hidehiko
Komatsu,
Masaharu
Kinoshita, and
Ikuya
Murakami
Laboratory of Neural Control, National Institute for Physiological
Sciences, Myodaiji, Okazaki-shi, Aichi, 444-8585 Japan
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ABSTRACT |
When visual stimuli that cover the entire blind spot are presented
monocularly, the color and brightness of the surrounding field are seen
within the blind spot, although it receives no retinal input. Important
questions about such perceptual filling-in are whether neurons in the
visual system representing visual field locations within the blind spot
are activated when filling-in occurs and, if so, what the properties of
these neurons are. To address these questions, we recorded the
activities of single neurons in the primary visual cortex (V1) of the
awake monkey. We first identified the area of V1 representing the
region of the blind spot and then assessed neural responses to
stationary visual stimuli of various size. We found that there are
neurons in layer 4 and deeper laminae, particularly layer 6, that
respond to large stimuli covering the blind spot which induces
perceptual filling-in. Most of these neurons had very large binocular
receptive fields that extended outside the blind spot. These neurons
also preferred relatively large stimuli and exhibited color
selectivity. These results indicate that when a large uniform surface
is presented on the blind spot, neurons at the V1 region representing
the blind spot transmit signals essential for filling-in that inform of the presence of a large surface as well as the absence of smaller stimuli at the blind spot.
Key words:
filling-in; blind spot; V1; monkey; surface perception; completion; visual perception
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INTRODUCTION |
When we look at a surface of
homogeneous color and luminance, light rays coming into the eye from
each point within the surface area stimulate retinal photoreceptors,
and this point-wise information may be the basis of our perception of
color and luminance. At the blind spot, however, there is no retinal
input; thus no such point-wise signal is available. Despite this, we
perceive some color and brightness within the blind spot as if the
stimulus attributes in the surround had filled it in (Ramachandran,
1992 ). This phenomenon is called perceptual filling-in (Walls, 1954 ; Gerrits and Vendrik, 1970 ; Ramachandran and Gregory, 1991 ; see Pessoa
et al., 1998 ) and is not unique to humans (Komatsu and Murakami,
1994a ).
Retinal topography is preserved in the primary visual cortex (V1) and
in many extrastriate visual areas (Daniel and Whitteridge, 1961 ; Van
Essen and Zeki, 1978 ; Gattass et al., 1981 , 1988 ). When we look at a
surface, a region of the visual cortex that corresponds topographically
to the surface is stimulated, and some of the neurons there are
activated. Such topographic correspondence is thought to be a neural
basis of surface perception. Several recent studies provide cumulative
evidence that both the contour and interior of a surface are
represented by the activities of V1 neurons (Lamme, 1995 ; Komatsu et
al., 1996 ; Rossi et al., 1996 ; Zipser et al., 1996 ). However,
perceptual filling-in at the blind spot raises an important question
about the relationship between topographic activities and surface
perception. When a homogeneous surface covers the blind spot, the
corresponding region of the retinotopic map of the cortex would not
receive afferent inputs as other regions do; nevertheless, we see a
homogeneous surface, not a surface with a blind spot-shaped hole. Where
in the brain is the perceived interior of the blind spot represented?
If surface perception requires V1 neurons to encode the interior of a
surface, V1 neurons in the retinotopic representation of the blind spot (hereafter referred to as "BS representation") should be activated when filling-in occurs at the blind spot.
Fiorani et al. (1992) reported previously that in anesthetized monkeys,
a bar moving across the blind spot generates a neural response in the
retinotopic representation of the blind spot in V1. To date, however,
there have been no attempts to study neural responses related to
filling-in of a surface at the blind spot or to any type of filling-in
there in an awake preparation. We therefore recorded neuron activities
from the BS representation in V1 of the awake monkey and analyzed their
visual responses. We addressed two main questions. Are neurons in the
BS representation in V1 activated when filling-in occurs? And if so,
what are the properties of these neurons?
Parts of this paper have been reported previously (Komatsu and
Murakami, 1994b ; Komatsu et al., 1995 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Behavioral task. Three macaque monkeys (Macaca
fuscata) were used for the experiments. During the experiments,
the monkeys sat in a primate chair and faced a computer display
[either a Mitsubishi XC3715C (Tokyo, Japan; 640 × 400 pixels;
subtending 21 × 13°; 173 cm from the monkeys' eyes; 60 frames/sec) or a Nanao Flex Scan 54T (Tokyo, Japan; 1024 × 768 pixels; subtending 34 × 26°; 57 cm from the monkeys' eyes; 60 frames/sec)].
Each monkey was first trained to perform a fixation task (Wurtz, 1969 ).
A trial started when a small stationary spot (fixation spot) appeared
on the screen. The monkey was required to look at the fixation spot
within 400 msec and then to maintain fixation within an electronic
window (1 × 1°) around the fixation spot for the remainder of
the trial. During fixation, another visual stimulus, which was used to
study the visual responses of neurons, was presented for 400 msec. The
task was controlled by a personal computer (NEC PC9801, Tokyo, Japan),
and visual stimuli were generated using a graphics board (Digital Arts
Hyper-Frame, Tokyo, Japan, or FORCE GP-1122N, Tokyo, Japan) in the same
computer. Eye position was monitored using the magnetic search-coil
technique (Robinson, 1963 ). If the monkey kept its gaze within the
electronic window until the end of the trial, it was given a drop of
water as a reward; otherwise the trial was terminated without reward.
Trials were separated by 3 sec intertrial intervals.
The monkeys were deprived of water for ~20 hr before their daily
experimental sessions, and the sessions were terminated when a
behavioral sign of satiety was observed. At the end of each experimental session, the monkey was returned to its home cage where it
was given chow ad libitum. All procedures related to animal
care and experimentation were in accordance with the National Institutes of Health Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (1996) and were approved by the institutional animal
experiment committee.
Procedures of surgery and recording. A stainless steel
recording chamber and a socket for connecting the monkey's head to a
primate chair were fixed to the skull using standard sterile surgical
techniques under sodium pentobarbital anesthesia. A search coil was
also surgically placed under the conjunctiva of one eye using the
method of Judge et al. (1980) and was connected to a plug on the top of
the skull. The recording chamber, the socket, and the eye coil plug
were all embedded in acrylic that covered the top of the skull and was
connected to the skull by implanted bolts.
After surgery, the monkeys were allowed to recover for at least 1 week
before the experiments were begun. After surgery but before beginning
experimentation, the location of the blind spot of each eye was
determined using a monocular visual saccade task, as described
previously in detail (Komatsu and Murakami, 1994a ). Briefly, each
monkey was trained to make a single visual saccade to a small target (a
square of 20 × 20 min of arc; 20 cd/m2) presented somewhere on the screen
(gray background; 1.7 cd/m2) and to
maintain fixation otherwise. After the training, the location of the
blind spot was determined in a monocular-viewing condition. In most
trials, target positions were deliberately chosen to avoid the blind
spot, and the monkey was readily able to make a saccade to the target.
Intermingled with these trials were others in which the target was
presented at a position expected to be near the blind spot, and the
ability of the monkey to make a saccade to the target was then used to
determine the boundary of the blind spot. The locations and extents of
the blind spots proved to be similar in the three monkeys, the blind
spots being located approximately along the horizontal meridian at
~16° from the fixation spot and extending ~5° horizontally and
7° vertically (e.g., see Figs. 2, 4-7).
Visual responses of neurons were examined using stationary rectangular
stimuli (20 cd/m2) presented on a gray
background (1.7 cd/m2). For the receptive
field mapping, square stimuli 0.3-1.3° on a side were used. To
examine the neural responses during the occurrence of perceptual
filling-in at the blind spot, we presented rectangular stimuli
(referred to as "surface stimuli") that completely covered the
blind spot (usually 6.7 × 10°; occasionally 10 × 10°).
Such a stimulus is perceived as a uniformly painted figure even though there is no retinal input at the blind spot; in other words, perceptual filling-in occurs for such a surface stimulus. The fixation spot was
presented at a somewhat shifted position, either to the left or right
of the screen, so that the entire blind spot was within the screen. To
test neural responses under monocular-viewing conditions, one of the
eyes was frequently occluded by an opaque mask.
The recording chamber was placed on the occipital cortex and tilted
~55° posteriorly. A thin-wire elgiloy microelectrode coated with
parylene (Microprobe, Potomac, MD) or a glass-coated tungsten microelectrode was advanced in a parasagittal plane using a hydraulic microdrive (Narishige, Tokyo, Japan). Neural signals were amplified and
discriminated on the basis of amplitude windows set at two different
timings (Bak DDIS-1, Germantown, MD) and then converted to
pulses. The unit pulses and behavioral events were recorded on a
computer at a temporal resolution of 1 msec and displayed in real time.
Eye positions were also monitored every 1 msec.
Histology. After completion of the recording experiments,
two of the monkeys were deeply anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital and perfused through the heart with fixative; one monkey (BM14) received 0.8% paraformaldehyde plus 1% glutaraldehyde, whereas the
other (BM23) received 10% formalin. Each brain was then removed from
the skull, and the occipital cortex from the recorded hemisphere was
cut into a series of 50 µm parasagittal sections. The sections were
then stained with cresyl violet to identify the recording sites.
The third monkey is still alive; judging from the penetration site,
there is no doubt that recordings were made from V1.
Monkey BM14 was also injected in one eye with wheat germ
agglutinin-conjugated horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP; 5% solution; 20 µl) under sodium pentobarbital anesthesia. The eye was injected twice
with a 3 d interval in between. Five days after the second injection of WGA-HRP, the monkey was perfused. The unrecorded occipital
cortex was then sectioned in tangential planes parallel to the cortical
surface. Every second section was processed using the
tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) method (Mesulam, 1978 ; Mesulam et al.,
1980 ), whereas the others were stained for cytochrome oxidase. The
TMB-stained sections were microscopically inspected under dark-field
illumination to detect any trans-synaptically transported HRP label in
V1; the BS representation was identified by the absence of label.
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RESULTS |
Representation of the blind spot in V1
We recorded single-unit activities from three hemispheres of three
monkeys. Figure 1 shows the recording
sites in V1 where the BS representation is located. This region is
shown in Figure 1B as a hatched region in
the posterior bank of the calcarine sulcus in a parasagittal section of
the occipital lobe (Fig. 1A, dotted line).
A tangential section through layer 4 of the cortex in the posterior
wall of the calcarine sulcus is shown in Figure 1C. TMB
staining after WGA-HRP injection into one eye clearly shows the
alternating labeled and unlabeled stripes identifying the ocular
dominance columns, as well as a large unlabeled elliptical region
corresponding to the optic disk of the injected eye. Although we will
refer to this region as the BS representation, in fact it means
"the representation of the region of the visual field corresponding
to the blind spot of one of the eyes."

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Figure 1.
Histological demonstration of the BS
representation in V1. A, Schematic diagram showing the
lateral surface of the macaque cerebral cortex. The dotted
line indicates where the section illustrated in
B was cut. B, Parasagittal section
through a posterior region of the cerebral cortex. The hatched
region in the posterior wall of the calcarine sulcus
(CS) represents an approximate location of the BS
representation in V1. C, TMB-stained tangential section
through the posterior wall of the CS. WGA-HRP was
injected into the contralateral eye before killing the animal; the
HRP-labeled region appears light, whereas the unlabeled
region is dark. A, Anterior;
D, dorsal; L, lateral; LS,
lunate sulcus; M, medial; P, posterior;
V, ventral.
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We identified this region by systematic receptive field mapping.
Because receptive field positions change in a regular manner along the
cortex, we were able to determine precisely the BS representation in
V1. When only the eye contralateral to the recorded hemisphere was
opened, the blind spot was formed in the examined visual hemifield because the optic disk is located in the nasal hemiretina of each eye.
For simplicity, the contralateral eye will be referred to as the
blind-spot eye (BE), and the ipsilateral eye will be referred to as the
nonblind-spot eye (NE). The viewing condition in which only the BE is
open will be called "BE-viewing." When the NE is open, no blind
spot is formed in the examined visual hemifield, and the BS
representation in V1 can receive retinal input. This viewing condition
will be called "NE-viewing." NE-viewing includes binocular viewing
and monocular viewing during which only the NE is open.
Neural responses to surface stimuli
After the BS representation in V1 was identified, we tested
whether neurons in this area responded to surface stimuli covering the
blind spot. The rasters and peristimulus time histograms (PSTHs) in
Figure 2, A and C,
show two examples of V1 neurons that clearly responded to the surface
stimulus covering the region corresponding to the blind spot. Such
responses were observed not only when retinal inputs to this part of
the visual field existed (NE-viewing), but also when there was no
retinal input to this part of the field (BE-viewing).

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Figure 2.
Responses of two representative V1 neurons
activated by visual stimuli presented at the blind spot.
A, Responses of a neuron (30494_1) to a
large homogeneous white rectangular stimulus (surface stimulus)
covering the entire blind spot. Left, The spatial
relationship between the stimulus, which extended 6.7° horizontally
and 10° vertically (thin line forming a
rectangle), and the blind spot (thick
line). Middle, Responses recorded while only the
BE was open (BE-viewing). Right, Responses recorded
while the NE was open (NE-viewing). PSTHs and rasters are
aligned with the onset of the stimuli, which were presented for 400 msec and are indicated by the thick horizontal line
below each PSTH. Short vertical lines on the
raster display indicate cell discharges; successive
lines represent successive trials. In these PSTHs and those in
other figures, the tick marks on the
x-axis are every 500 msec, the bin width is 20 msec, and
the calibration bar at the left of each histogram is 50 spikes/sec. B, Visual field representation of the
recording site of the neuron in A as indicated by the
receptive fields of other neurons recorded from the same penetration.
The boundary of the blind spot is indicated by a broken
line. Receptive fields of three single and multiple units
(solid lines) recorded in the binocular condition are
superimposed. They were located clearly inside of the visual field
corresponding to the blind spot. C, Responses of another
neuron (22594_1) to the surface stimulus. Conventions for
rasters and PSTHs are as described in A.
D, Visual field representation of the recording site of
the neuron in C as indicated by the receptive fields of
three other neurons recorded from the same penetration. For the sake of
simplicity, all receptive fields are plotted as if they were located in
the right hemifield in this and the following figures.
deg, Degree; s, sec; spks,
spikes.
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The receptive fields of other neurons recorded from the same
penetrations are shown in Figure 2, B and D.
These receptive fields, recorded while NE-viewing, were clearly located
inside the region of the visual field corresponding to the blind spot, confirming that our penetrations were indeed made into the BS representation in V1. Figure 2, B and D, does not
include the receptive fields of the neurons in A and
C, which will be described below.
We examined the responses of 82 single neurons to a surface stimulus
presented while BE-viewing (18 from monkey BM14, 60 from BM23, and 4 from GIN). A neuron was regarded as responsive to the surface
stimulus if the following two criteria were met: the magnitude of the
evoked change in the discharge rate was >10 spikes/sec, and the
difference between the background discharge rate before the stimulus
onset (0-300 msec) and the discharge rate during stimulus presentation
(20-420 msec) was statistically significant (t test,
p < 0.05). On the basis of these criteria, 20 neurons (24%) were classified as responsive to the surface stimulus during BE-viewing (6 from BM14, 12 from BM23, and 2 from GIN). All of these
neurons exhibited excitatory responses. Because the surface stimuli
cause perceptual filling-in at the blind spot, the experimental fact so
far indicates that some V1 neurons at the BS representation are
activated when the animal sees perceptual filling-in.
Properties of neurons responsive to surface stimuli
BE-viewing versus NE-viewing
The first issue we are going to address is the ocularity of these
neurons. The BS representation is basically a monocular region, as
evident in the ocular dominance patterns seen in Figure 1. This may
imply that in BE-viewing, responses are only a portion of the responses
obtained in NE-viewing. To test whether this is the case, we compared
the responses to the surface stimulus recorded in BE-viewing and those
recorded in NE-viewing in 63 of the 82 neurons recorded (Fig.
3). These include 17 of the 20 classified
as responsive during BE-viewing (Fig. 3, solid symbols). Most neurons fell below the diagonal line along which responses obtained during the two viewing conditions were equivalent. This indicates that many neurons were in fact more strongly activated by
NE-viewing than by BE-viewing. There were no systematic differences between the results obtained when the NE-viewing was monocular (Fig. 3,
square symbols) and those obtained when the NE-viewing was
binocular (Fig. 3, circles). Indeed, there were many neurons that responded to NE-viewing but not to BE-viewing; they seem to be
monocular cells responding only to stimulation of the NE. Several
neurons, however, exhibited comparable responses under both viewing
conditions. One responded much more strongly to BE-viewing than to
NE-viewing. This neuron had an antagonistic off-center/on-surround receptive field organization when mapped during NE-viewing, which resulted in a very weak or even negative response to the surface stimulus. By contrast, a clear excitatory response was evoked during
BE-viewing, because the inhibitory center was confined within the blind
spot. Therefore, this neuron required a large hole in the middle of the
surface stimulus for activation, but other neurons did not.

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Figure 3.
Comparison of responses to surface stimuli
obtained under BE- and NE-viewing conditions. y-axis,
Responses obtained while BE-viewing; x-axis, those
obtained while NE-viewing. Each symbol represents a
cell; solid symbols represent cells that responded to
the surface stimulus during BE-viewing, whereas open
symbols represent those that did not. Squares
represent cells whose responses were tested monocularly during
NE-viewing; circles represent those tested binocularly
during NE-viewing. Broken lines indicate where the
response magnitudes are zero. The diagonal line
indicates the points at which responses obtained under
the different conditions are the same.
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To summarize, input to this V1 region is predominantly from the NE, but
a subpopulation of the neurons also received input from the BE as well
and responded to the surface stimulus during BE-viewing.
Large receptive field
Because there is no retinal input in the blind spot, neurons
responding to a surface stimulus during BE-viewing must have received
visual inputs from outside of the blind spot. This may indicate that
the receptive fields of these neurons extend out of the blind spot.
Alternatively, these neurons may have nonclassical receptive field
surrounds around the blind spot and may only be activated by
simultaneous stimulation of both sides of the blind spot, as has been
suggested by Fiorani et al. (1992) . To test these possibilities, we
mapped the receptive fields of these neurons using smaller spots
(0.33 × 0.33 to 1.3 × 1.3°).
We found that many neurons responding to surface stimuli during
BE-viewing also responded when a smaller stimulus was presented outside
of the blind spot. For example, the neurons whose responses to surface
stimuli are shown in Figure 2 responded vigorously when a small
stimulus (0.67 × 0.67°) was presented on either side of the
blind spot (Fig. 4). Another such neuron
is illustrated in Figure 5; responses to
the surface stimulus are shown in the Figure 5 insets,
whereas responses to the small stimulus are plotted at corresponding
retinal locations relative to the blind spot. In NE-viewing, the
strongest response occurred when the stimulus was presented near the
center of the region corresponding to the blind spot (BS-corresponding
region). This neuron was also activated by a small spot presented at
several positions outside of the blind spot during both NE- and
BE-viewing. In BE-viewing (Fig. 5B), a small stimulus
presented either to the left or right of the blind spot generated clear
responses, but there was no response when the stimulus was presented
within the blind spot, making it appear as if this neuron had a
discontinuous receptive field. The most parsimonious interpretation of
this finding is that the neuron had a very large receptive field.

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Figure 4.
Responses of the same neurons shown in Figure 2,
A and B, to a small square stimulus
(0.67 × 0.67°) presented inside and outside of the blind spot
while BE-viewing. The locations and size of the stimulus relative to
the blind spot are shown as solid squares. Responses to
each stimulus are shown below the squares
as PSTHs.
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Figure 5.
Responses of a neuron to a small stimulus
(0.67 × 0.67°) presented at various locations inside and
outside of the blind spot (B; solid line)
or its corresponding region (A; dashed
line). Insets, Responses of this neuron to the
surface stimulus. A, Responses obtained during
NE-viewing. Each PSTH is plotted at the position where the stimulus was
presented. Significance of the responses is indicated by
asterisks: **p < 0.01, and
*0.01 p < 0.05 in t
tests. The boundary of the receptive field was determined as
shown by the solid circle. B,
Responses obtained during monocular BE-viewing. Note that there was no
response when the stimulus was presented within the blind spot, but
responses to stimuli outside of the blind spot were similar to those
shown in A.
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Using a small stimulus, we mapped the receptive fields of the 17 neurons that responded to the surface stimulus. The respective boundaries of the fields were determined by audiomonitoring the responses and by visual inspection of the PSTHs. This was performed while NE-viewing to scan both inside and outside of the
BS-corresponding region but was also done in BE-viewing for eight
neurons. When responses occurred during BE-viewing, the spatial extents
of the receptive fields were generally similar under the two viewing conditions, except that when BE-viewing, cells did not respond to
stimuli presented within the blind spot.
The horizontal and vertical extents of the receptive fields of 14 of
the neurons are shown in the form of ellipses in Figure 6A. Of the remaining
neurons, two also responded well to stimuli outside of the blind spot,
but their data were unsatisfactory for determining the boundary of the
receptive field; the other cell failed to respond at all. Thirteen
neurons had receptive fields that clearly extended outside the
BS-corresponding region. Because we were limited by the edge of the
display, in two of the monkeys, the most peripheral visual field mapped
was 20° in eccentricity. Consequently, we may have underestimated the
peripheral extent of the receptive field in some of the neurons with
very large receptive fields.

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Figure 6.
Superimposed plots of the receptive fields of V1
neurons recorded from the BS representation. These receptive fields
(thin solid lines) were recorded by the use of
small stationary stimuli (0.33 × 0.33 to 1.3 × 1.3°
squares) while NE-viewing. Thick broken lines indicate
the boundary of the BS-corresponding region. A,
Receptive fields of neurons responsive to the surface stimulus. Note
that many neurons had large receptive fields that covered most of the
blind spot and even extended outside of it. B, Receptive
fields of neurons that did not respond to the surface stimulus. A few
neurons had large receptive fields extending outside of the blind
spot.
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These findings indicate that, for many V1 neurons within the BS
representation that are activated by stimuli that would yield perceptual filling-in, such activation may be explained by the visual
inputs received by receptive fields that are larger than the blind
spot. On the other hand, three neurons had receptive fields that were
confined to within the BS-corresponding region (Fig.
6A, three plots inside the blind spot). Also, one
neuron failed to respond to the small stimulus at any position tested, as described above. Nonetheless, these neurons were activated by the
surface stimuli during BE-viewing. Thus, we may need to assume the
presence of a nonclassical receptive field surrounding the blind spot
for these neurons, as in the "completion neurons" described by
Fiorani et al. (1992) .
The receptive fields of 51 neurons that did not respond to the surface
stimulus during BE-viewing are shown for comparison in Figure
6B. In this case, many receptive fields densely
covered the inside of the BS-corresponding region; only a few neurons had large receptive fields extending beyond it. It may be, therefore, that a large receptive field is a notable feature of the neurons responding when filling-in perceptually occurs at the blind spot, although this feature is not strictly unique to them.
Stimulus size-response relation
The large receptive fields of the neurons responsive to the
surface stimulus in BE-viewing suggest that these neurons have less
position discriminability compared with typical V1 neurons. Then, what
about sensitivity to another important spatial parameter, namely, the
size of stimuli? To examine the size sensitivity of these neurons, we
assessed the relationships between the stimulus size and the response
in 10 neurons that responded to the surface stimulus during BE-viewing.
A typical series of the stimuli is shown in Figure
7A; all were centered either
at the center of the cell's receptive field or at the position where
the optimum response was obtained within the BS-corresponding region.
Presented while NE-viewing, the smallest stimulus was much smaller than the blind spot, whereas the largest covered nearly the entire blind
spot. Stimulus size-tuning curves of the 10 neurons are shown in Figure
7B. The optimum stimulus size differed from cell to cell,
but there was a general tendency that the response increased up to
~1-2° in the stimulus size and then saturated. This tendency can
be seen in Figure 7C that indicates the range of the
stimulus size that caused the response magnitude greater than half of
the maximum for each neuron as solid horizontal bars. In
Figure 7C, the optimum stimulus size for each neuron is
indicated by an open circle. Also, the ranges of stimuli
that yielded responses that were not statistically different from the
maximum response (t test, p > 0.05) are
indicated by horizontal lines above each bar. The
receptive field size of each neuron is indicated by an arrowhead below each bar. As can be seen, for the stimulus size
>1-2°, the response magnitude was comparable with the maximum
response (>50% of the maximum) for most neurons, and in many cases
the difference in the response was not statistically significant. Thus
it is unlikely that these neurons meaningfully discriminate stimulus size larger than 1-2°. It is also clear that no neuron selectively responded to a smaller stimulus. On the other hand, among those unresponsive to the surface stimulus in BE-viewing, there were many
neurons selectively responsive to a smaller stimulus. The range of the
stimulus size causing responses in one such neuron is indicated by a
shaded horizontal bar at the bottom of Figure 7C. These results indicate that neurons that are responsive
to surface stimuli carry little information about the precise size of
the stimulus, except that they prefer relatively large stimulus sizes
compared with typical V1 neurons.

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Figure 7.
Stimulus size-response relationships of neurons
activated by the surface stimulus while BE-viewing. A,
Various-sized square stimuli were used to assess spatial
summation properties. For each neuron, all stimuli were centered on the
same position within the BS-corresponding region (broken
line). The actual position differed from cell to cell, however,
and a representative example is shown. B, The
relationship between stimulus size and response magnitude in 10 neurons
is shown. The responses were recorded while NE-viewing and are
normalized to the maximum response of each neuron.
C, Ranges of the stimulus size that caused a response
magnitude greater than half of that of the optimum size for each of the
10 neurons in B are indicated as solid horizontal
bars. Lowercase letters to the
left of each bar correspond to those in
B. The optimum size is indicated by an open
circle, and the range of sizes that yielded responses that were
statistically not different from the maximum response (t
test, p > 0.05) are indicated by horizontal
lines above each bar. The receptive field sizes
( horizontal extent × vertical extent) of nine of these
neurons are indicated by arrowheads. At the
bottom, the range of the stimulus size causing responses
in one of the neurons unresponsive to the surface stimulus is indicated
as a shaded horizontal bar. A short gap
near the left or right ends of the
bars indicates that the response was greater than half
of the maximum for the smallest or the largest stimuli used.
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Latency
When a surface stimulus forms retinal images in two eyes, visual
signals are generated by retinal cells throughout the image in the NE,
but they are necessarily generated only around the optic disk in the
BE. Therefore, when neurons in the BS representation in V1 are
activated by the surface stimulus during BE-viewing, visual signals
arising from the surround of the blind spot need to be imported into
the BS representation. We hypothesized that this might increase the
latency of the visual response to the surface stimulus in BE-viewing.
The latencies of 15 of the 17 BE-responsive cells obtained while BE-
and NE-viewing are plotted in Figure 8
(the other two cells were rejected because they exhibited anomalous
response fluctuations around the first peak, which made determination
of latency unreliable). Differences in the latencies between the two
viewing conditions varied from cell to cell, but on average, the
latency was significantly (p = 0.005, Wilcoxon signed rank test) longer in BE-viewing (mean latency = 54.3 msec) than in NE-viewing (mean latency = 42.3 msec). Figure
9A shows spike density
profiles of an exemplar neuron exhibiting latencies of 80 msec during
BE-viewing and 48 msec during NE-viewing.

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Figure 8.
Comparison of response latencies obtained under
BE- and NE-viewing conditions. The x- and
y-axes plot the latencies of responses obtained while
NE- or BE-viewing, respectively. For each cell under each condition,
PSTHs were convolved with Gaussian ( = 10 msec), and the
time required for the resultant spike density profile to reach
threshold (2 SD above the background discharge rate) was taken as the
latency. Each circle represents a cell; solid
circles depict cells in which the magnitudes of evoked
responses during a 100 msec period after the latency did not differ
significantly (t test, p > 0.05)
under the two viewing conditions; open circles depict
cells in which response magnitudes did differ significantly under the
two viewing conditions. The line indicates where the
latency is the same under the two viewing conditions. Note that for
most cells, the latency was larger in BE-viewing.
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Figure 9.
Time courses of the responses to the surface
stimulus. Responses are shown as spike density plots in which PSTHs
were subjected to Gaussian ( = 10 msec) smoothing. In each
panel, the dotted line represents
BE-viewing; the solid line represents NE-viewing.
A, Responses of a representative cell in which the
magnitudes of evoked responses during a 100 msec period after the
latency did not differ significantly (t test,
p > 0.05) under the two viewing conditions.
B, The mean responses of eight such neurons. The period
of stimulus presentation is indicated by the thick horizontal
line. The calibrations bars on the left are 50 spikes/sec, and background discharge rates were subtracted from each
plot.
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One possible cause of the longer latency associated with BE-viewing may
be the comparative weakness of the driving force of the visual
stimulation, as is suggested by the weaker responses to the surface
stimulus (Fig. 3). To test whether this was the case, we computed the
mean discharge rate during the initial 100 msec after the response
latency for each neuron under both viewing conditions. In Figure 8, the
solid circles depict eight cells whose response magnitudes
were not statistically different (t test, p > 0.05) under the two viewing conditions. Although the difference in
the means was not statistically significant (p = 0.108, Wilcoxon signed rank test), response latencies clearly tended to
be longer in BE-viewing (mean latency = 57.4 msec) than in
NE-viewing (mean latency = 46.6 msec). The mean response for all
eight neurons is shown in Figure 9B. Note that the onset of the response occurs at similar latencies under both viewing conditions, but the peak latency is delayed in BE-viewing (94 vs 68 msec). This
divergence in the latencies suggests that there may be more than one
pathway by which visual signals are transmitted to the BS
representation in V1.
Orientation and color selectivity
When the perceptual filling-in of a uniform surface occurs at the
blind spot, the surface is perceived to be painted with uniform color
and brightness. Also, completion of oriented contours occurs at the
blind spot. These phenomena suggest that the information about the
quality of the surface or contour, such as color, brightness, or
orientation, is coded by the neurons involved in the perceptual filling-in at the blind spot. To examine this, we tested orientation selectivity and color selectivity in some of the neurons.
Orientation selectivity was tested by presenting eight slit stimuli
with orientation separated by 22.5°. The stimulus was presented
within the receptive field in NE-viewing. Color selectivity was tested
by using 9 or 14 colors that were systematically distributed on the
Commission Internationale de l'Eclairage-xy chromaticity diagram (Komatsu et al., 1992 ; Hanazawa et al., 2000 ). All color stimuli in a given set had the same luminance (4 or 8 cd/m2). The color stimuli had a
rectangular shape (6.7 × 10° in size in most cases) and were
presented in NE-viewing in most cases.
Twenty-nine neurons were examined for orientation selectivity; of
these, six were among those responsive to the surface stimulus in
BE-viewing. For each neuron, we computed the orientation selectivity index defined as follows: 1 (minimum response)/(maximum
response). We classified a cell as selective if both of the following
two conditions were satisfied: (1) it had a selectivity index
>0.5, and (2) responses varied significantly across the set of
orientations (one-way ANOVA, p < 0.05). The results
are summarized in Table 1. The proportion
of orientation-selective neurons was 50% for those responsive to the
surface stimulus, and it was somewhat higher (69.6%) for other
neurons. Both of these proportions are within the range reported
previously for orientation-selective neurons in macaque V1 (Felleman
and Van Essen, 1987 ).
Color selectivity was quantitatively determined in the same way that
the orientation selectivity was determined. Twenty-one neurons were
examined for color selectivity; of these, five were among those
responsive to the surface stimulus in BE-viewing. As can be seen in
Table 1, all five of these neurons were classified as color selective.
Of the remaining neurons, 10 were selective.
These results indicate that the activities of neurons that are
responsive to the surface stimulus in BE-viewing can convey information
about the color of the stimulus and that some of them also convey
information about the orientation.
Localization
Neurons that responded to the surface stimulus covering the blind
spot in BE-viewing were not homogeneously distributed in cortical
layers. In our experiments, electrodes were advanced into the brain
from the posterior surface of the cerebral cortex. As is shown
schematically in the Figure 10
inset, the electrode first passed through the posterior
surface of V1, then passed through the white matter, and eventually
entered the posterior wall of the calcarine sulcus where the BS
representation is located. As the electrode approached this region of
the cortex, first encountered was layer 6 and then more superficial
layers. We realized that neurons responding to the surface stimulus
during BE-viewing were often encountered as soon as we entered the
cortex at the posterior wall of the calcarine sulcus, most likely at
layer 6.

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Figure 10.
Relationship between recording depth and the
receptive field sizes ( horizontal extent × vertical extent)
of 65 V1 neurons in the BS representation. Solid squares
represent neurons that responded to the surface stimulus while
BE-viewing; open circles represent neurons that did not.
The x-axis shows the distance between the entrance to
the posterior bank of the CS and the recording
site for each neuron; a value of zero corresponds to layer 6, whereas a
negative value arises when the electrode was retracted slightly to
maintain isolation of a single unit. Inset, Schematic
diagram showing the electrode track. The electrode first passed through
the surface cortex of V1, then passed through the white matter, and
finally entered the posterior bank of the CS from layer
6.
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The relationship between recording depth and the receptive field size
of 65 neurons is shown in Figure 10. The depths of the neurons were
determined relative to the depth of the first neural activity noticed
in the posterior wall of the calcarine sulcus; thus points around zero
on the x-axis correspond to layer 6, whereas larger values
represent more superficial layers. Negative values on the
x-axis occurred when the electrode was retracted slightly to
maintain isolation of a unit. As was reported previously (Gilbert, 1977 ), neurons with very large receptive fields were found in layer 6, and receptive fields rapidly diminished in size as the electrode was
advanced. In Figure 10, 14 neurons that responded to the surface
stimulus in BE-viewing are represented as solid squares. Ten
of them had receptive fields larger than 5°, and they were likely at
layer 6. Another neuron was recorded from a depth very close to the
point at which the electrode entered this region of cortex, but it had
a small receptive field. The remaining three neurons were recorded
between 0.2 and 0.5 mm from the entrance and had receptive fields of
more typical size.
Except for those in layer 6, it was difficult to identify the layer of
each neuron, because we did not mark each recording site. Nonetheless,
receptive field sizes and background discharge rates provided some
hints about the layers in which the neurons were situated. The
receptive fields were on average the smallest at ~0.3 mm from the
entrance to the cortex, suggesting that layer 4C was located there
(Fig. 10). In addition, background discharges abruptly dropped at
~0.6 mm from the entrance to the cortex, suggesting that layer 4 ends
at this depth. We thus assume that the three neurons (solid
squares) recorded between 0.2 and 0.5 mm from the entrance to the
cortex were sampled from layer 4 or 5. Among our limited sample, no
neuron that responded to the surface stimulus during BE-viewing was
found in the superficial layers. This suggests that the neurons within
the BS representation of V1 that are activated by stimuli inducing
perceptual filling-in are located in layer 4 and deeper, particularly
in layer 6.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The present study provides unequivocal evidence that there are
neurons in the BS representation in V1 that are activated when the
animal sees perceptual filling-in at the blind spot (Komatsu and
Murakami, 1994a ). Most of these neurons had very large receptive fields
(larger than the blind spot itself), preferred relatively large
stimuli, were driven by stimulation of the normal eye as well, were
color selective, and were predominantly located in deep cortical layers.
Neural mechanisms of filling-in at the blind spot
An intriguing question about the neural mechanisms of perceptual
filling-in is how the perception of surface attributes is related to
the neuronal activity in the retinotopic map of the visual cortex.
Theoretically, one extreme possibility is that only the contrast at the
edge of a surface area is coded in the central visual system and that
neural activity does not correspond topographically to the perception
(see Pessoa et al., 1998 ). This view assumes that filling-in is
a result of some higher process. Another view argues that
surface-specific neuronal activity in the visual system occurs at a
relatively early stage of visual processing and that the activity is
topographically correlated with the perceptual consequence of
filling-in. Although some psychophysical studies support the former
idea (Cumming and Friend, 1980 ), other studies support the latter
(Tripathy and Levi, 1994 ; Murakami, 1995 ).
The present study and that of Fiorani et al. (1992) provide
physiological evidence that neuron activity occurs at the BS
representation when visual stimuli inducing perceptual filling-in are
presented across the blind spot. These findings reject the idea that
the BS representation in V1 is entirely governed by the normal eye.
In contrast with the experiments done by Fiorani et al. (1992) that
used stimuli for completion of the contour, our stimuli induce
filling-in of a homogeneous surface. To encode the presence of a
uniform surface covering the blind spot, it seems that two sets of
information have to be represented. One set of information is the
presence of large stimuli with certain color and brightness. The other set of information is the absence of small
stimuli, line terminations, local contrast, etc., within this region of the visual field. The activity of cells with little size
discriminability but with color selectivity can encode the presence of
colored stimuli; thus the activities of the neurons with large
receptive fields reported in the present study may carry the first set
of information. However, there should be no contradictory information from neurons that are selective for size and position of local contrast. Size-response relations of neurons as shown in Figure 7
suggest that when the surface stimulus covers the blind spot in
BE-viewing, cells tuned to smaller sizes were silent to the surface
stimulus and thus tacitly carry the second set of information to higher
cortical areas. Therefore, both sets of information essential for
filling-in seem to be represented in the BS representation in V1.
Neurons with large receptive fields clearly indicate the presence of
some mechanism by which visual information is imported from the
surround into the BS representation. Although we can only speculate on
what these neurons are actually doing, it is interesting to note that
they are mainly localized in layer 6. Neurons in this layer send
projections to the extrastriate cortex, but the major target of neurons
in layer 6 of V1 is the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) (Fitzpatrick
et al., 1994 ). Presumably, therefore, some of the neurons responding
during the occurrence of filling-in would send feedback signals to the
LGN. It has been suggested that such corticogeniculate feedback
modulates visual responses of neurons in the LGN, serving the process
of feature binding (Sillito et al., 1994 ). If layer 6 neurons in the BS
representation in V1 send axon collaterals to both sides of the BS
representation in the LGN, the feedback signal may modulate neural
responses to surface stimuli in the LGN and subsequently in V1. Such a
recurrent process might further enhance the activities of V1 and
extrastriate neurons responsive to surface stimuli and eventually
contribute to perceptual filling-in of a surface across the blind spot.
The above discussion is concerned with perceptual filling-in of simple
visual stimuli. Filling-in of more complex patterns also occurs at the
blind spot (Kawabata, 1983 ; Ramachandran, 1992 ). Undoubtedly, the
encoding of complex patterns requires detection of global features
across a wide spatial extent and the involvement of higher visual areas.
Comparison with a previous study
Fiorani et al. (1992) reported previously that some neurons in the
BS representation in V1 of the Cebus monkey are activated when a slit
stimulus is moved across the blind spot. The present study differs from
their report in several important respects. They used anesthetized
animals, whereas we used conscious subjects in whom perceptual
filling-in was undoubtedly experienced. In addition, the visual stimuli
differed. Fiorani et al. used oriented bar stimuli, whereas we used
large homogeneous surfaces; the perceptual counterpart is completion of
an oriented bar versus filling-in of a surface.
Fiorani et al. (1992) described neurons having "completion
properties" that were only activated by stimulation of both sides of
the blind spot. We also found neurons with similar properties, but they
were rare. In the present study, many of the neurons activated by
stimuli that induce filling-in had very large receptive fields that
extended out of both the left and right sides of the blind spot. In
NE-viewing, the receptive fields consisted of a continuous area,
whereas in BE-viewing, the fields naturally became discontinuous across
the blind spot. These neurons may thus correspond to those Fiorani et
al. described as having discontinuous receptive fields. Unfortunately,
Fiorani et al. provide no information comparing the extents of the
receptive field during BE- and NE-viewing; they reported only on neural
responses occurring while BE-viewing.
To summarize, although there are common findings, the present study and
that of Fiorani et al. (1992) emphasize the importance of neurons with
different properties in the BS representation in V1. We emphasize that
if V1 is involved in surface filling-in at the blind spot, neurons
having large receptive fields likely play a key role by importing
visual information from the surround to the inside of the retinotopic
representation of the blind spot.
Pathways of visual input
There are at least three possible pathways via which visual inputs
can reach the BS representation in V1. First, neurons in the LGN may
directly send axons to this region. Neurons surrounding the gap
corresponding to the optic disk in the LGN project mainly to the
surround of the BS representation in V1, but axons of some of these
neurons may diverge and terminate within the BS representation itself.
Second, visual inputs may initially reach the surround of the BS
representation in V1 and then be transmitted to the inside by way of
intracortical horizontal connections. V1 contains extensive horizontal
connections (Gilbert and Wiesel, 1983 ; Rockland and Lund, 1983 ) that
span up to several millimeters, long enough to transmit visual input
from the surround to the center of the BS representation. Third,
feedback from extrastriate areas may play a role (Bullier et al., 1996 ;
Lamme et al., 1997 ; Hupe et al., 1998 ). Transmission via these indirect
pathways would require more time than the direct geniculostriate input.
The tendency toward longer response latencies associated with
BE-viewing seems qualitatively consistent with this possibility. At
this moment, however, we have no further evidence favoring any of these
three possibilities.
Relation to physiological studies of other perceptual
completion phenomena
Several investigators have sought neural correlates to perceptual
filling-in and completion in the visual cortex. Some have found neural
activity in V1 to be correlated with perception, such as brightness
induction (Rossi et al., 1996 ) or amodal completion (Sugita, 1999 ),
whereas others have suggested involvement of higher visual areas in the
perception, such as illusory contour perception (von der Heydt et al.,
1984 ) or texture filling-in (De Weerd et al., 1995 ). Also, differences
in the time course among various completion phenomena suggest that
different sorts of perceptual completion are mediated by different
levels of processing in visual cortical areas. For instance, filling-in
at the blind spot occurs instantaneously, whereas the filling-in of
texture in artificial scotomata requires several seconds to develop
(Ramachandran and Gregory, 1991 ).
Among the various completion phenomena, filling-in at a monocular
retinal scotoma may be particularly relevant to the present study.
Binocular retinal lesions at the corresponding positions in the two
eyes cause reorganization of the retinotopic map in V1 (Kaas et al.,
1990 ; Gilbert and Wiesel, 1992 ; Chino et al., 1995 ). In contrast,
monocular retinal lesions do not cause such reorganization but leave
the affected portion of V1 unresponsive to stimulation of the lesioned
eye (Kaas et al., 1990 ; Murakami et al., 1997 ), which is very similar
to the case of the BS representation in V1. It would be interesting to
know whether neural responses similar to those observed in the present
study occur in the region representing the monocular scotoma and to
determine whether neural responses observed in the present study are
specific to the BS representation or are ubiquitous throughout V1.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Aug. 16, 2000; revised Oct. 2, 2000; accepted Oct. 3, 2000.
This work is supported by the "Research for the Future" Program
from The Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Grant 96L00202 and by the Japanese Ministry of Education Grant
08279102. We are grateful to Dr. Minami Ito for comments on a previous
version of this manuscript. We thank M. Okui, M. Togawa, and M. Yoshitomo for technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Hidehiko Komatsu at the above
address. E-mail: komatsu{at}nips.ac.jp.
Dr. Murakami's present address: Department of Human and Information
Science Lab, NTT Communication Science Labs, 3-1 Morinosato Wakamiya, Atsugi, Kanagawa, 243-0198 Japan.
 |
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May 1, 2005;
93(5):
2374 - 2387.
[Abstract]
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Y. Sasaki and T. Watanabe
The primary visual cortex fills in color
PNAS,
December 28, 2004;
101(52):
18251 - 18256.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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H. S Friedman, H. Zhou, and R. von der Heydt
The coding of uniform colour figures in monkey visual cortex
J. Physiol.,
April 15, 2003;
548(2):
593 - 613.
[Abstract]
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M. Kinoshita and H. Komatsu
Neural Representation of the Luminance and Brightness of a Uniform Surface in the Macaque Primary Visual Cortex
J Neurophysiol,
November 1, 2001;
86(5):
2559 - 2570.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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