1. Evidence for fast signals and later processing in human V1/V2 and V5/MT+: A TMS study of motion perception
- Author
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David P. Crewther, Paul B. Fitzgerald, Sheila G. Crewther, and Robin Laycock
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Primates ,Visual perception ,Time Factors ,genetic structures ,Physiology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Motion Perception ,Stimulation ,Visual processing ,Parvocellular cell ,medicine ,Reaction Time ,Animals ,Humans ,Motion perception ,Visual Cortex ,Communication ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Cortex (botany) ,Transcranial magnetic stimulation ,Kinetics ,Visual cortex ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,business ,Neuroscience ,Photic Stimulation ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Evidence from human and primate studies suggests that fast visual processing may utilize signals projecting from primary visual cortex (V1) through the dorsal stream, to area V5/MT+ or beyond and subsequently back into V1. This coincides with the arrival of parvocellular signals en route to the ventral pathway and infero-temporal cortex. Such evidence suggests that the dorsal stream region V5/MT+ is activated rapidly through the traditional hierarchical pathway and also via a less-well-established direct signal to V5/MT+ bypassing V1. To test this, 16 healthy humans underwent transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) of V1/V2 and V5/MT+ while performing a motion-direction detection task. A three-alternate forced-choice design (left/right motion, stationary) allowed analysis of the quality of errors made, in addition to the more usual performance measures. Transient disruption of V1/V2 and V5/MT+ significantly reduced accuracy when TMS was applied at or near motion onset. Most participants also showed disrupted performance with TMS application over V1/V2 ∼125 ms post motion onset, and significantly reduced accuracy at 158 ms with V5/MT+ stimulation. The two periods of disruption with V1/V2 TMS are suggestive of feedforward/feedback models, although the earlier period of disruption has not been reported in previous TMS studies. Very early activation of V5/MT+, evidenced by diminished accuracy and reduced perception of motion after TMS may be indicative of a thalamic-extrastriate pathway in addition to the traditionally expected later period of processing. A profound disruption of performance prestimulus onset is more likely to reflect disruption of top-down expectancy than disruption of visual processing. more...
- Published
- 2007