A fertile convergence of anatomical, electrophysiological, psychophysical, functional imaging and computational approaches has made visual motion one of the most active areas of research with a number of important well-defined problems that are yielding to rigorous investigation. We expect that the outcome of the research program proposed here will contribute in important ways to our understanding of the functional architecture of the human visual motion system by a) elucidating the nature and organization of the mechanisms involved in the visual guidance of navigation, and b) investigating whether a particular anatomical region is computationally necessary for specific visual functions. The method by which we will address this is through studying the performance of neurological patients with discrete lesions on talks specifically designed to address the cortical mechanisms believed to underlie visual navigation. How does locomotor guidance depend on optic flow, 3D scene structure, and the recognition of landmarks? Are motion and stereo integrated at different stages in this process? We have previously developed a psychophysical paradigm of computer generated motion stimuli designed to critically analyze motion. Within this paradigm we shall now develop a new set of tasks designed to examine the effect of discrete brain lesions in neurological patients on (1) the perception of speed and direction of complex motion patterns, discrimination of the center of motion, heading perception; (2) the interaction between stereopsis and global motion and how different cues for 3D perception are processed; (3) perceptual-motor actions. Progress in understanding the neural substrate and the mechanisms underlying specific deficits in motion for navigation will provide important clues for how perception is linked to action. The correlation of neuroimaging, neuro-ophthalmological, neurological and neuropsychological examinations with patients' performance on the psychophysical tasks of visual navigation described in this proposal will be useful for devising diagnostic and mediation strategies.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Eye Institute (NEI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01EY007861-10A2
Application #
6287689
Study Section
Visual Sciences B Study Section (VISB)
Program Officer
Oberdorfer, Michael
Project Start
1989-08-01
Project End
2005-11-30
Budget Start
2000-12-01
Budget End
2001-11-30
Support Year
10
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
$354,150
Indirect Cost
Name
Boston University
Department
Engineering (All Types)
Type
Schools of Engineering
DUNS #
042250712
City
Boston
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02215
Beardsley, Scott A; Vaina, Lucia M (2008) An effect of relative motion on trajectory discrimination. Vision Res 48:1040-52
Cowey, Alan; Campana, Gianluca; Walsh, Vincent et al. (2006) The role of human extra-striate visual areas V5/MT and V2/V3 in the perception of the direction of global motion: a transcranial magnetic stimulation study. Exp Brain Res 171:558-62
Calabro, Finnegan J; Vaina, Lucia M (2006) Stereo motion transparency processing implements an ecological smoothness constraint. Perception 35:1219-32
Beardsley, Scott A; Vaina, Lucia M (2006) Global motion mechanisms compensate local motion deficits in a patient with a bilateral occipital lobe lesion. Exp Brain Res 173:724-32
Vaina, Lucia M; Cowey, Alan; Jakab, Marianna et al. (2005) Deficits of motion integration and segregation in patients with unilateral extrastriate lesions. Brain 128:2134-45
Beardsley, Scott A; Vaina, Lucia M (2005) How can a patient blind to radial motion discriminate shifts in the center-of-motion? J Comput Neurosci 18:55-66
Vaina, Lucia M; Soloviev, Sergei (2004) First-order and second-order motion: neurological evidence for neuroanatomically distinct systems. Prog Brain Res 144:197-212
Vaina, Lucia M; Gross, Charles G (2004) Perceptual deficits in patients with impaired recognition of biological motion after temporal lobe lesions. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101:16947-51
Royden, Constance S; Vaina, Lucia M (2004) Is precise discrimination of low level motion needed for heading discrimination? Neuroreport 15:1013-7
Beardsley, Scott A; Ward, Robert L; Vaina, Lucia M (2003) A neural network model of spiral-planar motion tuning in MSTd. Vision Res 43:577-95

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