The Representation of Illusory and Real Contours in Human Cortical Visual Areas Revealed by Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Open Access
- 1 October 1999
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 19 (19) , 8560-8572
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.19-19-08560.1999
Abstract
Illusory contours (perceived edges that exist in the absence of local stimulus borders) demonstrate that perception is an active process, creating features not present in the light patterns striking the retina. Illusory contours are thought to be processed using mechanisms that partially overlap with those of “real” contours, but questions about the neural substrate of these percepts remain. Here, we employed functional magnetic resonance imaging to obtain physiological signals from human visual cortex while subjects viewed different types of contours, both real and illusory. We sampled these signals independently from nine visual areas, each defined by retinotopic or other independent criteria. Using both within- and across-subject analysis, we found evidence for overlapping sites of processing; most areas responded to most types of contours. However, there were distinctive differences in the strength of activity across areas and contour types. Two types of illusory contours differed in the strength of activation of the retinotopic areas, but both types activated crudely retinotopic visual areas, including V3A, V4v, V7, and V8, bilaterally. The extent of activation was largely invariant across a range of stimulus sizes that produce illusory contours perceptually, but it was related to the spatial frequency of displaced-grating stimuli. Finally, there was a striking similarity in the pattern of results for the illusory contour-defined shape and a similar shape defined by stereoscopic depth. These and other results suggest a role in surface perception for this lateral occipital region that includes V3A, V4v, V7, and V8.Keywords
This publication has 54 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cortical Surface-Based AnalysisNeuroImage, 1999
- Cortical Surface-Based AnalysisNeuroImage, 1999
- Retinotopic organization in human visual cortex and the spatial precision of functional MRICerebral Cortex, 1997
- Orientation Maps of Subjective Contours in Visual CortexScience, 1996
- Movement‐Related effects in fMRI time‐seriesMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1996
- Borders of Multiple Visual Areas in Humans Revealed by Functional Magnetic Resonance ImagingScience, 1995
- Vision.The Philosophical Review, 1985
- Illusory contours are not caused by simultaneous brightness contrastPerception & Psychophysics, 1983
- Spatial mapping in the primate sensory projection: Analytic structure and relevance to perceptionBiological Cybernetics, 1977
- Is the illusory triangle physical or imaginary?Nature, 1975