Laminar Cortical Dynamics of Visual Form and Motion Interactions During Coherent Object Motion Perception

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dc.contributor.author Berzhanskaya, J. en_US
dc.contributor.author Grossberg, S. en_US
dc.contributor.author Mingolla, E. en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2011-11-14T18:19:28Z
dc.date.available 2011-11-14T18:19:28Z
dc.date.issued 2007-01 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2144/2045
dc.description.abstract How do visual form and motion processes cooperate to compute object motion when each process separately is insufficient? Consider, for example, a deer moving behind a bush. Here the partially occluded fragments of motion signals available to an observer must be coherently grouped into the motion of a single object. A 3D FORMOTION model comprises five important functional interactions involving the brain’s form and motion systems that address such situations. Because the model’s stages are analogous to areas of the primate visual system, we refer to the stages by corresponding anatomical names. In one of these functional interactions, 3D boundary representations, in which figures are separated from their backgrounds, are formed in cortical area V2. These depth-selective V2 boundaries select motion signals at the appropriate depths in MT via V2-to-MT signals. In another, motion signals in MT disambiguate locally incomplete or ambiguous boundary signals in V2 via MT-to-V1-to-V2 feedback. The third functional property concerns resolution of the aperture problem along straight moving contours by propagating the influence of unambiguous motion signals generated at contour terminators or corners. Here, sparse “feature tracking signals” from, e.g., line ends, are amplified to overwhelm numerically superior ambiguous motion signals along line segment interiors. In the fourth, a spatially anisotropic motion grouping process takes place across perceptual space via MT-MST feedback to integrate veridical feature-tracking and ambiguous motion signals to determine a global object motion percept. The fifth property uses the MT-MST feedback loop to convey an attentional priming signal from higher brain areas back to V1 and V2. The model's use of mechanisms such as divisive normalization, endstopping, cross-orientation inhibition, and longrange cooperation is described. Simulated data include: the degree of motion coherence of rotating shapes observed through apertures, the coherent vs. element motion percepts separated in depth during the chopsticks illusion, and the rigid vs. non-rigid appearance of rotating ellipses. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship Air Force Office of Scientific Research (F49620-01-1-0397); National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NMA201-01-1-2016); National Science Foundation (BCS-0235398, SBE-0354378); Office of Naval Research (N00014-95-1-0409, N00014-01-1-0624) en_US
dc.publisher Boston University Center for Adaptive Systems and Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries BU CAS/CNS Technical Reports;CAS/CNS-TR-2006-003 en_US
dc.rights Copyright 2006 Boston University. Permission to copy without fee all or part of this material is granted provided that: 1. The copies are not made or distributed for direct commercial advantage; 2. the report title, author, document number, and release date appear, and notice is given that copying is by permission of BOSTON UNIVERSITY TRUSTEES. To copy otherwise, or to republish, requires a fee and / or special permission. en_US
dc.subject Motion perception en_US
dc.subject Depth perception en_US
dc.subject Perceptual grouping en_US
dc.subject Prestriate cortex en_US
dc.subject V1 en_US
dc.subject V2 en_US
dc.subject MT en_US
dc.subject MST en_US
dc.title Laminar Cortical Dynamics of Visual Form and Motion Interactions During Coherent Object Motion Perception en_US
dc.type Technical Report en_US
dc.rights.holder Boston University Trustees en_US

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