Changing human visual field organization from early visual to extra-occipital cortex.

The early visual areas have a clear topographic organization, such that adjacent parts of the cortical surface represent distinct yet adjacent parts of the contralateral visual field. We examined whether cortical regions outside occipital cortex show a similar organization.The BOLD responses to disc...

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Main Authors: Anthony I Jack, Gaurav H Patel, Serguei V Astafiev, Abraham Z Snyder, Erbil Akbudak, Gordon L Shulman, Maurizio Corbetta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2007-05-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1866221?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-f9ff59f4b6254e4982c0d9950ec1bcc02020-11-24T20:50:06ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032007-05-0125e45210.1371/journal.pone.0000452Changing human visual field organization from early visual to extra-occipital cortex.Anthony I JackGaurav H PatelSerguei V AstafievAbraham Z SnyderErbil AkbudakGordon L ShulmanMaurizio CorbettaThe early visual areas have a clear topographic organization, such that adjacent parts of the cortical surface represent distinct yet adjacent parts of the contralateral visual field. We examined whether cortical regions outside occipital cortex show a similar organization.The BOLD responses to discrete visual field locations that varied in both polar angle and eccentricity were measured using two different tasks. As described previously, numerous occipital regions are both selective for the contralateral visual field and show topographic organization within that field. Extra-occipital regions are also selective for the contralateral visual field, but possess little (or no) topographic organization. A regional analysis demonstrates that this weak topography is not due to increased receptive field size in extra-occipital areas.A number of extra-occipital areas are identified that are sensitive to visual field location. Neurons in these areas corresponding to different locations in the contralateral visual field do not demonstrate any regular or robust topographic organization, but appear instead to be intermixed on the cortical surface. This suggests a shift from processing that is predominately local in visual space, in occipital areas, to global, in extra-occipital areas. Global processing fits with a role for these extra-occipital areas in selecting a spatial locus for attention and/or eye-movements.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1866221?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anthony I Jack
Gaurav H Patel
Serguei V Astafiev
Abraham Z Snyder
Erbil Akbudak
Gordon L Shulman
Maurizio Corbetta
spellingShingle Anthony I Jack
Gaurav H Patel
Serguei V Astafiev
Abraham Z Snyder
Erbil Akbudak
Gordon L Shulman
Maurizio Corbetta
Changing human visual field organization from early visual to extra-occipital cortex.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Anthony I Jack
Gaurav H Patel
Serguei V Astafiev
Abraham Z Snyder
Erbil Akbudak
Gordon L Shulman
Maurizio Corbetta
author_sort Anthony I Jack
title Changing human visual field organization from early visual to extra-occipital cortex.
title_short Changing human visual field organization from early visual to extra-occipital cortex.
title_full Changing human visual field organization from early visual to extra-occipital cortex.
title_fullStr Changing human visual field organization from early visual to extra-occipital cortex.
title_full_unstemmed Changing human visual field organization from early visual to extra-occipital cortex.
title_sort changing human visual field organization from early visual to extra-occipital cortex.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2007-05-01
description The early visual areas have a clear topographic organization, such that adjacent parts of the cortical surface represent distinct yet adjacent parts of the contralateral visual field. We examined whether cortical regions outside occipital cortex show a similar organization.The BOLD responses to discrete visual field locations that varied in both polar angle and eccentricity were measured using two different tasks. As described previously, numerous occipital regions are both selective for the contralateral visual field and show topographic organization within that field. Extra-occipital regions are also selective for the contralateral visual field, but possess little (or no) topographic organization. A regional analysis demonstrates that this weak topography is not due to increased receptive field size in extra-occipital areas.A number of extra-occipital areas are identified that are sensitive to visual field location. Neurons in these areas corresponding to different locations in the contralateral visual field do not demonstrate any regular or robust topographic organization, but appear instead to be intermixed on the cortical surface. This suggests a shift from processing that is predominately local in visual space, in occipital areas, to global, in extra-occipital areas. Global processing fits with a role for these extra-occipital areas in selecting a spatial locus for attention and/or eye-movements.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1866221?pdf=render
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