Journal article

Spatially selective responses to Kanizsa and occlusion stimuli in human visual cortex


Authors listde Haas, B; Schwarzkopf, DS

Publication year2018

JournalScientific Reports

Volume number8

ISSN2045-2322

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-19121-z

PublisherNature Research


Abstract
Early visual cortex responds to illusory contours in which abutting lines or collinear edges imply the presence of an occluding surface, as well as to occluded parts of an object. Here we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and population receptive field (pRF) analysis to map retinotopic responses in early visual cortex using bar stimuli defined by illusory contours, occluded parts of a bar, or subtle luminance contrast. All conditions produced retinotopic responses in early visual field maps even though signal-to-noise ratios were very low. We found that signal-to-noise ratios and coherence with independent high-contrast mapping data increased from V1 to V2 to V3. Moreover, we found no differences of signal-to-noise ratios or pRF sizes between the low-contrast luminance and illusion conditions. We propose that all three conditions mapped spatial attention to the bar location rather than activations specifically related to illusory contours or occlusion.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation stylede Haas, B. and Schwarzkopf, D. (2018) Spatially selective responses to Kanizsa and occlusion stimuli in human visual cortex, Scientific Reports, 8, Article 611. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-19121-z

APA Citation stylede Haas, B., & Schwarzkopf, D. (2018). Spatially selective responses to Kanizsa and occlusion stimuli in human visual cortex. Scientific Reports. 8, Article 611. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-19121-z


Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 17:00