Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4035957 Vision Research 2005 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

Visual motion is sensed by low-level (energy-based) and high-level (feature-based) mechanisms. Ocular following responses (OFR) were elicited in humans by applying horizontal motion to vertical square-wave gratings lacking the fundamental (“missing fundamental stimulus”). Motion consisted of successive 1/4-wavelength steps, so the features and 4n + 1 harmonics (where n = integer) shifted forwards, whereas the 4n − 1 harmonics—including the strongest Fourier component (the 3rd harmonic)—shifted backwards (spatial aliasing). Initial OFR, recorded with the electromagnetic search coil technique, were always in the direction of the 3rd harmonic, e.g., leftward steps resulted in rightward OFR. Thus, the earliest OFR were strongly dependent on the motion of the major Fourier component, consistent with early spatio-temporal filtering prior to motion detection, as in the well-known energy model of motion analysis.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Sensory Systems
Authors
, , , ,