Cargando…

Demonstration of Tuning to Stimulus Orientation in the Human Visual Cortex: A High-Resolution fMRI Study with a Novel Continuous and Periodic Stimulation Paradigm

Cells in the animal early visual cortex are sensitive to contour orientations and form repeated structures known as orientation columns. At the behavioral level, there exist 2 well-known global biases in orientation perception (oblique effect and radial bias) in both animals and humans. However, the...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sun, Pei, Gardner, Justin L., Costagli, Mauro, Ueno, Kenichi, Waggoner, R. Allen, Tanaka, Keiji, Cheng, Kang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3673175/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22661413
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhs149
_version_ 1782272220891971584
author Sun, Pei
Gardner, Justin L.
Costagli, Mauro
Ueno, Kenichi
Waggoner, R. Allen
Tanaka, Keiji
Cheng, Kang
author_facet Sun, Pei
Gardner, Justin L.
Costagli, Mauro
Ueno, Kenichi
Waggoner, R. Allen
Tanaka, Keiji
Cheng, Kang
author_sort Sun, Pei
collection PubMed
description Cells in the animal early visual cortex are sensitive to contour orientations and form repeated structures known as orientation columns. At the behavioral level, there exist 2 well-known global biases in orientation perception (oblique effect and radial bias) in both animals and humans. However, their neural bases are still under debate. To unveil how these behavioral biases are achieved in the early visual cortex, we conducted high-resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging experiments with a novel continuous and periodic stimulation paradigm. By inserting resting recovery periods between successive stimulation periods and introducing a pair of orthogonal stimulation conditions that differed by 90° continuously, we focused on analyzing a blood oxygenation level-dependent response modulated by the change in stimulus orientation and reliably extracted orientation preferences of single voxels. We found that there are more voxels preferring horizontal and vertical orientations, a physiological substrate underlying the oblique effect, and that these over-representations of horizontal and vertical orientations are prevalent in the cortical regions near the horizontal- and vertical-meridian representations, a phenomenon related to the radial bias. Behaviorally, we also confirmed that there exists perceptual superiority for horizontal and vertical orientations around horizontal and vertical meridians, respectively. Our results, thus, refined the neural mechanisms of these 2 global biases in orientation perception.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3673175
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-36731752013-06-05 Demonstration of Tuning to Stimulus Orientation in the Human Visual Cortex: A High-Resolution fMRI Study with a Novel Continuous and Periodic Stimulation Paradigm Sun, Pei Gardner, Justin L. Costagli, Mauro Ueno, Kenichi Waggoner, R. Allen Tanaka, Keiji Cheng, Kang Cereb Cortex Articles Cells in the animal early visual cortex are sensitive to contour orientations and form repeated structures known as orientation columns. At the behavioral level, there exist 2 well-known global biases in orientation perception (oblique effect and radial bias) in both animals and humans. However, their neural bases are still under debate. To unveil how these behavioral biases are achieved in the early visual cortex, we conducted high-resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging experiments with a novel continuous and periodic stimulation paradigm. By inserting resting recovery periods between successive stimulation periods and introducing a pair of orthogonal stimulation conditions that differed by 90° continuously, we focused on analyzing a blood oxygenation level-dependent response modulated by the change in stimulus orientation and reliably extracted orientation preferences of single voxels. We found that there are more voxels preferring horizontal and vertical orientations, a physiological substrate underlying the oblique effect, and that these over-representations of horizontal and vertical orientations are prevalent in the cortical regions near the horizontal- and vertical-meridian representations, a phenomenon related to the radial bias. Behaviorally, we also confirmed that there exists perceptual superiority for horizontal and vertical orientations around horizontal and vertical meridians, respectively. Our results, thus, refined the neural mechanisms of these 2 global biases in orientation perception. Oxford University Press 2013-07 2012-06-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3673175/ /pubmed/22661413 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhs149 Text en © The Authors 2012. Published by Oxford University Press. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5), which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Articles
Sun, Pei
Gardner, Justin L.
Costagli, Mauro
Ueno, Kenichi
Waggoner, R. Allen
Tanaka, Keiji
Cheng, Kang
Demonstration of Tuning to Stimulus Orientation in the Human Visual Cortex: A High-Resolution fMRI Study with a Novel Continuous and Periodic Stimulation Paradigm
title Demonstration of Tuning to Stimulus Orientation in the Human Visual Cortex: A High-Resolution fMRI Study with a Novel Continuous and Periodic Stimulation Paradigm
title_full Demonstration of Tuning to Stimulus Orientation in the Human Visual Cortex: A High-Resolution fMRI Study with a Novel Continuous and Periodic Stimulation Paradigm
title_fullStr Demonstration of Tuning to Stimulus Orientation in the Human Visual Cortex: A High-Resolution fMRI Study with a Novel Continuous and Periodic Stimulation Paradigm
title_full_unstemmed Demonstration of Tuning to Stimulus Orientation in the Human Visual Cortex: A High-Resolution fMRI Study with a Novel Continuous and Periodic Stimulation Paradigm
title_short Demonstration of Tuning to Stimulus Orientation in the Human Visual Cortex: A High-Resolution fMRI Study with a Novel Continuous and Periodic Stimulation Paradigm
title_sort demonstration of tuning to stimulus orientation in the human visual cortex: a high-resolution fmri study with a novel continuous and periodic stimulation paradigm
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3673175/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22661413
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhs149
work_keys_str_mv AT sunpei demonstrationoftuningtostimulusorientationinthehumanvisualcortexahighresolutionfmristudywithanovelcontinuousandperiodicstimulationparadigm
AT gardnerjustinl demonstrationoftuningtostimulusorientationinthehumanvisualcortexahighresolutionfmristudywithanovelcontinuousandperiodicstimulationparadigm
AT costaglimauro demonstrationoftuningtostimulusorientationinthehumanvisualcortexahighresolutionfmristudywithanovelcontinuousandperiodicstimulationparadigm
AT uenokenichi demonstrationoftuningtostimulusorientationinthehumanvisualcortexahighresolutionfmristudywithanovelcontinuousandperiodicstimulationparadigm
AT waggonerrallen demonstrationoftuningtostimulusorientationinthehumanvisualcortexahighresolutionfmristudywithanovelcontinuousandperiodicstimulationparadigm
AT tanakakeiji demonstrationoftuningtostimulusorientationinthehumanvisualcortexahighresolutionfmristudywithanovelcontinuousandperiodicstimulationparadigm
AT chengkang demonstrationoftuningtostimulusorientationinthehumanvisualcortexahighresolutionfmristudywithanovelcontinuousandperiodicstimulationparadigm