Maps of Visual Space in Human Occipital Cortex Are Retinotopic, Not Spatiotopic
Open Access
- 9 April 2008
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 28 (15) , 3988-3999
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.5476-07.2008
Abstract
We experience the visual world as phenomenally invariant to eye position, but almost all cortical maps of visual space in monkeys use a retinotopic reference frame, that is, the cortical representation of a point in the visual world is different across eye positions. It was recently reported that human cortical area MT (unlike monkey MT) represents stimuli in a reference frame linked to the position of stimuli in space, a “spatiotopic” reference frame. We used visuotopic mapping with blood oxygen level-dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging signals to define 12 human visual cortical areas, and then determined whether the reference frame in each area was spatiotopic or retinotopic. We found that all 12 areas, including MT, represented stimuli in a retinotopic reference frame. Although there were patches of cortex in and around these visual areas that were ostensibly spatiotopic, none of these patches exhibited reliable stimulus-evoked responses. We conclude that the early, visuotopically organized visual cortical areas in the human brain (like their counterparts in the monkey brain) represent stimuli in a retinotopic reference frame.Keywords
This publication has 85 references indexed in Scilit:
- Remapping in Human Visual CortexJournal of Neurophysiology, 2007
- Two Retinotopic Visual Areas in Human Lateral Occipital CortexJournal of Neuroscience, 2006
- Decoding Seen and Attended Motion Directions from Activity in the Human Visual CortexCurrent Biology, 2006
- Contrast Adaptation and Representation in Human Early Visual CortexNeuron, 2005
- Pattern-motion responses in human visual cortexNature Neuroscience, 2001
- Where is 'Dorsal V4' in Human Visual Cortex? Retinotopic, Topographic and Functional EvidenceCerebral Cortex, 2001
- Brodmann's Areas 17 and 18 Brought into Stereotaxic Space—Where and How Variable?NeuroImage, 2000
- Optimal experimental design for event-related fMRIHuman Brain Mapping, 1998
- Eye Position Influence on the Parieto‐occipital Area PO (V6) of the Macaque MonkeyEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 1995
- Callosal and prefrontal associational projecting cell populations in area 7A of the macaque monkey: A study using retrogradely transported fluorescent dyesJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1985