Abstract : Curr Biol 1999 Jul 15;9(14):763-6
Cardinal directions for visual optic flow.
Morrone MC, Burr DC, Di Pietro S, Stefanelli MA
Istituto di Neurofisiologia del CNR, Via S. Zeno 51, Pisa, 56127, Italy.
As we move through our environment, the flow of deforming images on
the retinae provides a rich source of information about the three-dimensional
structure of the external world and how to navigate through it. Recent
evidence from psychophysical [1] [2] [3] [4], electrophysiological [5]
[6] [7] [8] [9] and imaging [10] [11] studies suggests that there are neurons
in the primate visual system - in the medial superior temporal cortex -
that are specialised to respond to this type of complex 'optic flow' motion.
In principle, optic flow could be encoded by a small number of neural mechanisms
tuned to 'cardinal directions', including radial and circular motion [12]
[13]. There is little support for this idea at present, however, from either
physiological [6] [7] or psychophysical [14] research. We have measured
the sensitivity of human subjects for detection of motion and for discrimination
of motion direction over a wide and densely sampled range of complex motions.
Average sensitivity was higher for inward and outward radial movement and
for both directions of rotation, consistent with the existence of detectors
tuned to these four types of motion. Principle component analysis revealed
two clear components, one for radial stimuli (outward and inward) and the
other for circular stimuli (clockwise and counter-clock-wise). The results
imply that the mechanisms that analyse optic flow in humans tend to be
tuned to the cardinal axes of radial and rotational motion.