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 Previous Article

The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1, 2000, 20(15):5885-5897

Occlusion and the Interpretation of Visual Motion: Perceptual and Neuronal Effects of Context

Robert O. Duncan1, Thomas D. Albright1, 2, and Gene R. Stoner1

1 Systems Neurobiology Laboratories and 2 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, The Salk Institute for Biological Studies, La Jolla, California 92037

Visual motion can be represented in terms of the dynamic visual features in the retinal image or in terms of the moving surfaces in the environment that give rise to these features. For natural images, the two types of representation are necessarily quite different because many moving features are only spuriously related to the motion of surfaces in the visual scene. Such "extrinsic" features arise at occlusion boundaries and may be detected by virtue of the depth-ordering cues that exist at those boundaries. Although a number of studies have provided evidence of the impact of depth ordering on the perception of visual motion, few attempts have been made to identify the neuronal substrate of this interaction. To address this issue, we devised a simple contextual manipulation that decouples surface motion from the motions of visual image features. By altering the depth ordering between a moving pattern and abutting static regions, the perceived direction of motion changes dramatically while image motion remains constant. When stimulated with these displays, many neurons in the primate middle temporal visual area (area MT) represent the implied surface motion rather than the motion of retinal image features. These neurons thus use contextual depth-ordering information to achieve a representation of the visual scene consistent with perceptual experience.

Key words: motion perception; psychophysics; neurophysiology; binocular disparity; extrastriate; monkey


Copyright © 2000 Society for Neuroscience  0270-6474/00/20155885-13$05.00/0


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