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Receptive field focus of visual area V4 neurons determines responses to illusory surfaces.


ABSTRACT: Illusory figures demonstrate the visual system's ability to infer surfaces under conditions of fragmented sensory input. To investigate the role of midlevel visual area V4 in visual surface completion, we used multielectrode arrays to measure spiking responses to two types of visual stimuli: Kanizsa patterns that induce the perception of an illusory surface and physically similar control stimuli that do not. Neurons in V4 exhibited stronger and sometimes rhythmic spiking responses for the illusion-promoting configurations compared with controls. Moreover, this elevated response depended on the precise alignment of the neuron's peak visual field sensitivity (receptive field focus) with the illusory surface itself. Neurons whose receptive field focus was over adjacent inducing elements, less than 1.5° away, did not show response enhancement to the illusion. Neither receptive field sizes nor fixational eye movements could account for this effect, which was present in both single-unit signals and multiunit activity. These results suggest that the active perceptual completion of surfaces and shapes, which is a fundamental problem in natural visual experience, draws upon the selective enhancement of activity within a distinct subpopulation of neurons in cortical area V4.

SUBMITTER: Cox MA 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3801031 | biostudies-literature | 2013 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Receptive field focus of visual area V4 neurons determines responses to illusory surfaces.

Cox Michele A MA   Schmid Michael C MC   Peters Andrew J AJ   Saunders Richard C RC   Leopold David A DA   Maier Alexander A  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20131001 42


Illusory figures demonstrate the visual system's ability to infer surfaces under conditions of fragmented sensory input. To investigate the role of midlevel visual area V4 in visual surface completion, we used multielectrode arrays to measure spiking responses to two types of visual stimuli: Kanizsa patterns that induce the perception of an illusory surface and physically similar control stimuli that do not. Neurons in V4 exhibited stronger and sometimes rhythmic spiking responses for the illusi  ...[more]

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