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Visual timing-tuned responses in human association cortices and response dynamics in early visual cortex

Evi Hendrikx, Jacob M. Paul, Martijn van Ackooij, Nathan Van der Stoep, Ben M. Harvey

2022Nature Communications30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Quantifying the timing (duration and frequency) of brief visual events is vital to human perception, multisensory integration and action planning. Tuned neural responses to visual event timing have been found in association cortices, in areas implicated in these processes. Here we ask how these timing-tuned responses are related to the responses of early visual cortex, which monotonically increase with event duration and frequency. Using 7-Tesla functional magnetic resonance imaging and neural model-based analyses, we find a gradual transition from monotonically increasing to timing-tuned neural responses beginning in the medial temporal area (MT/V5). Therefore, across successive stages of visual processing, timing-tuned response components gradually become dominant over inherent sensory response modulation by event timing. This additional timing-tuned response component is independent of retinotopic location. We propose that this hierarchical emergence of timing-tuned responses from sensory processing areas quantifies sensory event timing while abstracting temporal representations from spatial properties of their inputs.

Topics & Concepts

Functional magnetic resonance imagingSensory systemVisual cortexNeuroscienceTime perceptionPerceptionAssociation (psychology)Visual perceptionSensory processingVisual processingEvent (particle physics)Computer sciencePsychologyPhysicsPsychotherapistQuantum mechanicsNeural dynamics and brain functionVisual perception and processing mechanismsNeuroscience and Music Perception
Visual timing-tuned responses in human association cortices and response dynamics in early visual cortex | Litcius