Retinotopic connectivity maps of human visual cortex with unconstrained eye movements

被引:0
|
作者
Tangtartharakul, Gene [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Morgan, Catherine A. [2 ,3 ,4 ]
Rushton, Simon K. [5 ]
Schwarzkopf, D. Samuel [1 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Auckland, Sch Optometry & Vis Sci, Auckland, New Zealand
[2] Univ Auckland, Sch Psychol, Auckland, New Zealand
[3] Univ Auckland, Ctr Brain Res, Auckland, New Zealand
[4] UniServices Ltd, Ctr Adv MRI, Auckland, New Zealand
[5] Cardiff Univ, Sch Psychol, Cardiff, Wales
[6] UCL, Expt Psychol, London, England
关键词
brain mapping; connective fields; functional connectivity; population receptive fields; retinotopy; reverse correlation; visual system; RECEPTIVE-FIELDS; AREA; ORGANIZATION;
D O I
10.1002/hbm.26446
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Human visual cortex contains topographic visual field maps whose organization can be revealed with retinotopic mapping. Unfortunately, constraints posed by standard mapping hinder its use in patients, atypical subject groups, and individuals at either end of the lifespan. This severely limits the conclusions we can draw about visual processing in such individuals. Here, we present a novel data-driven method to estimate connective fields, resulting in fine-grained maps of the functional connectivity between brain areas. We find that inhibitory connectivity fields accompany, and often surround facilitatory fields. The visual field extent of these inhibitory subfields falls off with cortical magnification. We further show that our method is robust to large eye movements and myopic defocus. Importantly, freed from the controlled stimulus conditions in standard mapping experiments, using entertaining stimuli and unconstrained eye movements our approach can generate retinotopic maps, including the periphery visual field hitherto only possible to map with special stimulus displays. Generally, our results show that the connective field method can gain knowledge about retinotopic architecture of visual cortex in patients and participants where this is at best difficult and confounded, if not impossible, with current methods.
引用
收藏
页码:5221 / 5237
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Retinotopic distribution of chromatic responses in human primary visual cortex
    Vanni, S.
    Henriksson, L.
    Viikari, M.
    James, A. C.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2006, 24 (06) : 1821 - 1831
  • [22] Abnormal retinotopic representations in human visual cortex revealed by fMRI
    Morland, AB
    Baseler, HA
    Hoffmann, MB
    Sharpe, LT
    Wandell, BA
    ACTA PSYCHOLOGICA, 2001, 107 (1-3) : 229 - 247
  • [23] Auditory modulation of visual stimulus encoding in human retinotopic cortex
    de Haas, Benjamin
    Schwarzkopf, D. Samuel
    Urner, Maren
    Rees, Geraint
    NEUROIMAGE, 2013, 70 : 258 - 267
  • [24] Retinotopic maps in the mouse visual cortex based on Fourier analysis of flavoprotein fluorescence signals
    Tohmi, Manavu
    Komagata, Seiij
    Kubota, Yamato
    Kudoh, Masaharu
    Shibuki, Katsuei
    NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH, 2006, 55 : S224 - S224
  • [25] EYE-MOVEMENTS AND DEVELOPMENT OF VISUAL-CORTEX
    BUISSERET, P
    JOURNAL DE PHYSIOLOGIE, 1986, 81 (02): : A13 - A13
  • [26] Emotional enhancement in retinotopic visual cortex
    de Castro, A. Gomez-Carrillo
    Rothkirch, M.
    Kaul, C.
    Sterzer, P.
    PERCEPTION, 2009, 38 : 82 - 83
  • [27] The Retinotopic Representation of Time in Visual Cortex
    Fortunato, Gianfranco
    Kenel-Pierre, Tatiana
    Murray, Micah
    Bueti, Domenica
    PERCEPTION, 2019, 48 : 147 - 147
  • [28] Eye movements and retinotopic tuning in developmental prosopagnosia
    Peterson, Matthew F.
    Zaun, Ian
    Hoke, Harris
    Guo Jiahui
    Duchaine, Brad
    Kanwisher, Nancy
    JOURNAL OF VISION, 2019, 19 (09):
  • [29] An intrinsic hierarchical, retinotopic organization of visual pulvinar connectivity in the human neonate
    Ayzenberg, Vladislav
    Song, Chenjie
    Arcaro, Michael J.
    CURRENT BIOLOGY, 2025, 35 (02)
  • [30] Visual field maps in human cortex
    Wandell, Brian A.
    Dumoulin, Serge O.
    Brewer, Alyssa A.
    NEURON, 2007, 56 (02) : 366 - 383