Journal article
Second order components of moving plaids activate extrastriate cortex: A positron emission tomography study
P Wenderoth, JDG Watson, GF Egan, HJ Tochon-Danguy, GJ O'Keefe
Neuroimage | ACADEMIC PRESS INC | Published : 1999
Abstract
A moving plaid is a composite pattern produced by superimposing two sinusoidal gratings which differ in orientation and motion direction. The perceived drift direction of a plaid appears to be determined partly by a binocular mechanism, which follows intersection of constraint rules (Burke and Wenderoth, 1993b), and partly by a monocular mechanism, which tracks the dark and bright intersects of the plaid, the contrast envelopes. The first neurones that respond to plaids as patterns rather than component gratings are found in area V5, also known as MT, which is exclusively binocular. Therefore, the psychophysical evidence suggesting that the contrast envelope tracking mechanism is monocular i..
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