A motion-from-form mechanism contributes to extracting pattern motion from plaids

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Abstract

Since the discovery of neurons selective for pattern motion direction in primate middle temporal areaMT(Albright, 1984; Movshon et al., 1985), the neural computation of this signal has been the subject of intense study. The bulk of this work has explored responses to plaids obtained by summing two drifting sinusoidal gratings. Unfortunately, with these stimuli, many different mechanisms are similarly effective at extracting pattern motion. We devised a new set of stimuli, obtained by summing two random line stimuli with different orientations. This allowed several novel manipulations, including generating plaids that do not contain rigid 2D motion. Importantly, these stimuli do not engage most of the previously proposed mechanisms. We then recorded the ocular following responses that such stimuli induce inhumansubjects.Wefound that pattern motion is computed even with stimuli that do not cohere perceptually, including those without rigid motion, and even when the two gratings are presented separately to the two eyes. Moderate temporal and/or spatial separation of the gratings impairs the computation. We show that, of the models proposed so far, only those based on the intersectionof- constraints rule, embedding a motion-from-form mechanism (in which orientation signals are used in the computation of motion direction signals), can account for our results. At least for the eye movements reported here, a motion-from-form mechanism is thus involved in one of the most basic functions of the visual motion system: extracting motion direction from complex scenes.

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Quaia, C., Optican, L. M., & Cumming, B. G. (2016). A motion-from-form mechanism contributes to extracting pattern motion from plaids. Journal of Neuroscience, 36(14), 3903–3918. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3398-15.2016

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