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Chapter 8 –Perceiving Motion Types of motion 1. Actual Motion G9 p181 a. Background stable and figure moves across the retina. Our experience is that person moves. b. Figure stable on retina but background moves as eyes track figure. Our experience is that person moves even though the image of the person is stable on the retina. More on that, later. c. Image of background moves across retina as observer moves through the environment, i.e., “Maria walks through the room.” Our experience is that room is stable. More on that, later. In all of these examples, something is actually moving – either the figure or the background. There are differences between these examples, but they all share the important point that something is actually moving. Motion Perception - 1 2. Apparent motion Perception of motion arising from sequential stimulation at two or more nonmoving points in visual field. Nothing is actually moving. Lights at different places are merely being turned on and off. This experience of movement occurs when viewing motion pictures, television motion, and moving signs. Simplest is the phi phenomenon, original proposed by Max Wertheimer VL 8.8 for phi phenomenon. Question: Are the neural mechanisms that govern our experience of motion when we are presented with apparent motion stimulation the same as those that govern our experience of motion when we are presented with real motion stimulation? Goldstein says, “Yes.” Question: What % of our motion experiences are of apparent motion. Answer depends on how much television and movies you watch – but it’s a huge percentage. 3. Induced movement perception. Continuous movement of a large object causes a smaller nearby stationary object to appear to move. Research example: http://psychlab1.hanover.edu/Classes/Sensation/induced/ You’re sitting in a car in a parking lot. Unbeknownst to you, the care next to you begins to back out of its place. You experience your own car as moving. Clouds moving past the moon. VL 8.12 (Not very convincing.) 4. Motion aftereffects – the waterfall effect. VL – 8.9 Click on “Done”, then watch the sinewave grating move to the right VL 8.13 (Good), 8-14 (Good) (Rotate for 30 seconds, then click on Novel Stimulus button. 5. Drug induced perceptions of movement. Drugs presumably cause neurons that are involved in the perception of movement to emit action potentials, leading to perceptions of movement unassociated with actual movement. Motion Perception - 2 Explanations of Motion Perception 1. The Gibsonian / Gestalt Explanation Motion is the direct perception of a specific stimulus configuration. We have cells (or groups of cells) that directly respond to specific stimuli changing configurations over time. These output of these cells yields our experience of motion Gestalt Explanation of the first basic real movement situation The first example. Moving figure creates a local disturbance in the visual scene – shown by the star shapes in the figure. This disturbance is responded to by cells “looking for” such disturbances and experienced as motion. The second example. The movement of the wall relative to the figure creates a local disturbance in the visual scene. As above, this disturbance is responded to by cells “looking for” such disturbances and is experienced as motion. The third example. Although the image of the wall on the retina is moving, there is no local disturbance, so there is no perception of motion. Note that this explanation of movement perception does not require that we perceive the object that is moving separately as an object. All is requires is the perception of local disturbances in the visual scene. It assumes that those local disturbances are experienced as movement. Bottom line on the Gestalt Explanation: It is not a mainstream belief, but it is still considered. Motion Perception - 3 Neural Circuit Explanation. A Basic Neural Circuit for Motion – The Reichardt Detector - G9 p 182 The following circuit would respond to movement of an image across the retina. A. Movement that will NOT be detected. A excites E which ultimately inhibits F. A short time later, B excites F. If the inhibition initiated by A arrives at the same time as the excitation from B, F will not respond. The key is the time delay associated with having neuron E in the circuit. E delays the inhibition, so that it arrives at F, just as the excitation from B arrives. Same goes for C and D. So neuron “I” will not respond to an object moving at the right speed from left to Right. B. Movement that will be detected. But it will respond to movement of an object going from right to left. Play ..\..\..\MDBT\P312\Movement\Reichardt Detector Circuit.pptx This circuit explains very easily, the first of the real movement examples, Figure 8a. The above circuit would not respond to the particular movement (left to right) shown in 8a, but it would respond to movement of a person in the opposite direction. Motion Perception - 4 Corollary Discharge Theory – Taking eye movements into account. G9 p 183 The above circuit accounts for the perception of movement of a moving object across a stationary background – Figure 8a. But what about perception of movement when the object that is moving is stationary on the retina? Figure 8b – Person perceived as moving even though his image on retina is stationary. Why don’t we experience the wall as moving? Corollary DischargeTheory According to this theory, movement perception is the result of a comparison of input from the retina – indicating whether images are moving across the retina or not – and input from the muscles that control eye movements – indicating whether the eyes are moving or not. The input from the muscles is probably not actual signals from the eye muscles saying, “Hey, I’ve just moved the eye.” Instead, that input is probably copies of signals saying “Hey, move the eyes.” that were sent TO the eye muscles by movement-controlling neurons. That’s why the signals regarding the eye muscles are called corollary discharge signals. This theory assumes that our ultimate perception is based on the output of a movement detecting comparator – a neuron or collection of neurons that compares the retinal image movements such as the Reichardt detector above with eye movements. Retinal Image Signals Comparator Eye Muscles Signals Motion Perception - 5 “Movement” or “No Movement” Corollary Discharge Theory explanation of Figure 8 – G9 p 183 8a Retinal Object Movement Eye Movement Yes No Comparator: “Movement” 8b Retinal Object Movement Eye Movement No Yes Comparator: “Movement” Afterimage Demonstration G9 p 184 Look at an object. Turn off the lights. Watch the afterimage move. Image Movement Eye Movement No Yes Comparator: “Movement” Eye rubbing Demonstration G9 p. 185 Focus on an object. Rub the outside of your eyelid (Fig 8.14). Watch the world move. 0 Image Movement No Comparator: “Movement” Motion Perception - 6 Eye Movement No, but signals sent. So where are these circuits for processing motion? G9 186 Area MT – Y1 p 230 An area of the brain where activity of virtually all the neurons are involved with motion. Motion Perception - 7 Three major collections of information about MT neurons . . . 1. MT Neurons detect movement in all directions. Studies in which activity of individual MT neurons has been recorded have found that they respond best (either by increasing their rates of activity or decreasing them) only when something moves in their receptive field. So they detect movement. Virtually all are tuned for direction of movement – each one responds best only when the object moves in a specific direction across the receptive field. 2. MT Neurons apparently cause motion perception. G9 p 187 a. Monkeys viewed a collection of dots moving from left to right and responded accordingly, b. Monkeys viewed same dots moving in same directions, but also received neural stimulation of MT neurons tuned for downward movement. Resulting perception was a compromise. This means that if you wanted to create the illusion of movement, all you would need to do was stimulate the appropriate MT neurons. 3. Disruption of MT neurons impairs movement perception 1. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) . A brief magnetic pulse, targeted at the MT, dramatically impairs perception of motion. Motion Perception - 8 The Aperture Problem: G9 p 188 Individual neurons view the world through small windows. If a neuron detects only movement in 1 specific direction, say left-to-right, then . . . Multiple directions of actual movement would cause the same response in that neuron. See VL 8-16 Aperture Problem is a good demonstration of this. Solution to the aperture problem Pack and Born (2001) found that neurons in the MT of monkeys initially respond as if there is an aperture problem, then the neurons begin responding to indicate the correct direction of movement. There is apparently communication among motion detecting neurons that allow them to “conclude” that motion which appears to be horizontal is actually oblique or some other angle. Motion Perception - 9 Perceptual Organization from Biological Motion – Point-Light Walkers – G9 p 192 We experience organic form from minimal information if that information is in motion. VL 8-20 and 8-21 The Biomotion Lab Directed by Prof. Dr. Nikolaus Troje, the lab is located at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. Demonstrations – BML Walker demos many attributes of a walking human http://www.biomotionlab.ca/ for an overview. Click on left arrow to get walker. (http://www.biomotionlab.ca/Demos/BMLrunner.html) for a simpler demonstration Motion Perception - 10 Where is biological motion perceived? Neurons controlling perception of biological motion have been found in the posterior superior temporal sulcus (STSp) in the temporal lobe. Evidence . . . 1. Activity recordings during viewing of biological motion suggest that this region is involved. Neurons in this area change their rates of responding whenever the observer perceives biological motion, but not other types of motion. 2. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) leads to difficulty in perceiving such motion. When TMS is applied, the points of light appear to be just unrelated points of light – not people. Motion Perception - 11 A complication: Eye movements Why do we have eye movements? 1. To refresh the image on the retina so receptor adaptation won’t make the image disappear. A stabilized image eventually disappears because eventually, the receptors adapt to unchanging stimulation. 2. To speed up fixation of objects – neck and body muscles are too slow. 3. To keep objects fixated as the head moves. Types of eye movements 1. Saccadic movements Abrupt, rapid movements occurring about 3 times per second Occur in localizing and reading. 1000s of times per hour. ~~ 180 times per minute ~~~ 3 per second. 2. Smooth pursuit eye movements- movements that occur when tracking a moving object or when changing focus from one point in the visual field to another. 3. Vergence eye movements – Eye movements that occur when shifting attention from a close object to a far object or vice versa. Why we don’t experience movement associated with saccades? Saccadic Suppression: The shutting down of retinal input during saccadic movements. Motion Perception - 12 Some specific movement modules in the cortex The parietal lobe and movement The anterior parietal lobe contains a map of sensations from the skin. “ante”= front The posterior parietal lobe contains neurons that control movement. Grasping Arm reach Eye movement MT The Lateral Intraparietal Area (LIP). Y1 p 247. Neurons in this area fire when an eye movement is intended. Recordings have shown that the active neuron is the one whose receptive field is the location to which the eyes will be moved. The Medial intraparietal area (MIP). Y1 p 248. Neurons in this area fire when an arm reach is intended. Recordings have shown that the active neuron is the associated with the direction of the reach toward a specific location. Different neurons are associated with different directions. The Anterior Intraparietal area (AIP). Neurons in this area fire indicating the type of grasping motion the hand will make. The neurons described above are all involved in intended movement. Hmm – if we could monitor enough of them, we could predict what someone was going to do just before he/she did it. Motion Perception - 13