The cortical basis of global motion detection in blindsight.

The importance of stimulus qualities such as orientation, motion and luminance in blindsight are well known but their cortical basis has been much less explored. We therefore studied the performance of two blindsighted hemianopic subjects (GY and MS), in a task in which the subject had to decide in...

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Main Authors: Alexander, I, Cowey, A
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2009
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author Alexander, I
Cowey, A
author_facet Alexander, I
Cowey, A
author_sort Alexander, I
collection OXFORD
description The importance of stimulus qualities such as orientation, motion and luminance in blindsight are well known but their cortical basis has been much less explored. We therefore studied the performance of two blindsighted hemianopic subjects (GY and MS), in a task in which the subject had to decide in which of two adjunctive intervals a pattern of global spots moved coherently, at a variety of speeds, in the hemianopic field. Their ability was compared with that of two control subjects with normal vision. Both hemianopes performed this simple discrimination well in their blind fields but their performance was impaired by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) applied over cortical area hV5/MT(+) although not, or only slightly, by stimulation over the region of V3 or the vertex. The result is a direct demonstration that area hV5/MT(+) is necessary for global motion detection in blindsight.
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spelling oxford-uuid:66946187-9432-4975-ae0e-e07bccc247252022-03-26T18:32:49ZThe cortical basis of global motion detection in blindsight.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:66946187-9432-4975-ae0e-e07bccc24725EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2009Alexander, ICowey, AThe importance of stimulus qualities such as orientation, motion and luminance in blindsight are well known but their cortical basis has been much less explored. We therefore studied the performance of two blindsighted hemianopic subjects (GY and MS), in a task in which the subject had to decide in which of two adjunctive intervals a pattern of global spots moved coherently, at a variety of speeds, in the hemianopic field. Their ability was compared with that of two control subjects with normal vision. Both hemianopes performed this simple discrimination well in their blind fields but their performance was impaired by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) applied over cortical area hV5/MT(+) although not, or only slightly, by stimulation over the region of V3 or the vertex. The result is a direct demonstration that area hV5/MT(+) is necessary for global motion detection in blindsight.
spellingShingle Alexander, I
Cowey, A
The cortical basis of global motion detection in blindsight.
title The cortical basis of global motion detection in blindsight.
title_full The cortical basis of global motion detection in blindsight.
title_fullStr The cortical basis of global motion detection in blindsight.
title_full_unstemmed The cortical basis of global motion detection in blindsight.
title_short The cortical basis of global motion detection in blindsight.
title_sort cortical basis of global motion detection in blindsight
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