Responses of Anterior Superior Temporal Polysensory (STPa) Neurons to “Biological Motion” Stimuli
- 1 April 1994
- journal article
- Published by MIT Press in Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
- Vol. 6 (2) , 99-116
- https://doi.org/10.1162/jocn.1994.6.2.99
Abstract
Cells have been found in the superior temporal polysensory area (STPa) of the macaque temporal cortex that are selectively responsive to the sight of particular whole body movements (e.g., walking) under normal lighting. These cells typically discriminate the direction of walking and the view of the body (e.g., left profile walking left). We investigated the extent to which these cells are responsive under "biological motion" conditions where the form of the body is defined only by the movement of light patches attached to the points of limb articulation. One-third of the cells (25/72) selective for the form and motion of walking bodies showed sensitivity to the moving light displays. Seven of these cells showed only partial sensitivity to form from motion, in so far as the cells responded more to moving light displays than to moving controls but failed to discriminate body view. These seven cells exhibited directional selectivity. Eighteen cells showed statistical discrimination for both direction of movement and body view under biological motion conditions. Most of these cells showed reduced responses to the impoverished moving light stimuli compared to full light conditions. The 18 cells were thus sensitive to detailed form information (body view) from the pattern of articulating motion. Cellular processing of the global pattern of articulation was indicated by the observations that none of these cells were found sensitive to movement of individual limbs and that jumbling the pattern of moving limbs reduced response magnitude. A further 10 cells were tested for sensitivity to moving light displays of whole body actions other than walking. Of these cells 5/10 showed selectivity for form displayed by biological motion stimuli that paralleled the selectivity under normal lighting conditions. The cell responses thus provide direct evidence for neural mechanisms computing form from nonrigid motion. The selectivity of the cells was for body view, specific direction, and specific type of body motion presented by moving light displays and is not predicted by many current computational approaches to the extraction of form from motion.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Separate visual pathways for perception and actionPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Action Categories and the Perception of Biological MotionPerception, 1993
- Low-level visual processing of biological motionProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1992
- Masking the motions of human gaitPerception & Psychophysics, 1988
- A region based approach for human body motion analysisPattern Recognition, 1987
- Visual analysis of body movements by neurones in the temporal cortex of the macaque monkey: A preliminary reportBehavioural Brain Research, 1985
- The Development of Infant Sensitivity to Biomechanical MotionsChild Development, 1985
- Recovery of rigid structure from orthographically projected optical flowComputer Vision, Graphics, and Image Processing, 1984
- Generation of Synthetic Male and Female Walkers through Manipulation of a Biomechanical InvariantPerception, 1978
- Visual Perception of Bending MotionPerception, 1973