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Science 17 January 2003: Vol. 299. no. 5605, pp. 417 - 420 DOI: 10.1126/science.1077091
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Reports
Contributions of the Visual Ventral Pathway to Long-Range Apparent Motion
Yan Zhuo,1
Tian Gang Zhou,1
Heng Yi Rao,1
Jiong Jiong Wang,1
Ming Meng,1
Ming Chen,2
Cheng Zhou,2
Lin Chen1*
Objects displaced intermittently across the visual field will
nonetheless give an illusion of continuous motion [called apparent motion (AM)] under many common conditions. It is believed that form
perception is of minor importance in determining AM, and that AM is
mediated by motion-sensitive areas in the "where" pathway of the
cortex. However, form and motion typically interact in specific ways
when natural objects move through the environment. We used functional
magnetic resonance imaging to measure cortical activation to long-range
AM, compared to short-range AM and flicker, while we varied stability
of structural differences between forms. Long-range AM activated the
anterior-temporal lobe in the visual ventral pathway, and the response
varied according to the form stability. The results suggest that
long-range AM is associated with neural systems for form perception.
1 Key Laboratory of Cognitive Science, Graduate
School, Institute of Biophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 15 Datun
Road, 100101 Beijing, China.
2 Beijing Hospital, 1 DaiHua Road, 100730 Beijing, China.
*
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail:
lchen{at}public2.bta.net.cn
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