Human visual cortical responses to specular and matte motion flows

Determining the compositional properties of surfaces in the environment is an important visual capacity. One such property is specular reflectance, which encompasses the range from matte to shiny surfaces. Visual estimation of specular reflectance can be informed by characteristic motion profiles; a...

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Main Authors: Tae-Eui eKam, Damien J. Mannion, Seong-Whan eLee, Katja eDoerschner, Daniel J. Kersten
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2015.00579/full
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spelling doaj-74604d9ee9be4eb6933b21913424e8c02020-11-25T02:38:07ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Human Neuroscience1662-51612015-10-01910.3389/fnhum.2015.00579151202Human visual cortical responses to specular and matte motion flowsTae-Eui eKam0Damien J. Mannion1Damien J. Mannion2Damien J. Mannion3Seong-Whan eLee4Seong-Whan eLee5Katja eDoerschner6Katja eDoerschner7Daniel J. Kersten8Daniel J. Kersten9Korea UniversityKorea UniversityUNSW AustraliaUniversity of MinnesotaKorea UniversityKorea UniversityBilkent UniversityBilkent UniversityKorea UniversityUniversity of MinnesotaDetermining the compositional properties of surfaces in the environment is an important visual capacity. One such property is specular reflectance, which encompasses the range from matte to shiny surfaces. Visual estimation of specular reflectance can be informed by characteristic motion profiles; a surface with a specular reflectance that is difficult to determine while static can be confidently disambiguated when set in motion. Here, we used fMRI to trace the sensitivity of human visual cortex to such motion cues, both with and without photometric cues to specular reflectance. Participants viewed rotating blob-like objects that were rendered as images (photometric) or dots (kinematic) with either matte-consistent or shiny-consistent specular reflectance profiles. We were unable to identify any areas in low and mid-level human visual cortex that responded preferentially to surface specular reflectance from motion. However, univariate and multivariate analyses identified several visual areas; V1, V2, V3, V3A/B, and hMT+, capable of differentiating shiny from matte surface flows. These results indicate that the machinery for extracting kinematic cues is present in human visual cortex, but the areas involved in integrating such information with the photometric cues necessary for surface specular reflectance remain unclear.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2015.00579/fullClassificationVisual Perceptionfunctional magnetic resonance imaging(fMRI)Surface materialsMotion flow
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tae-Eui eKam
Damien J. Mannion
Damien J. Mannion
Damien J. Mannion
Seong-Whan eLee
Seong-Whan eLee
Katja eDoerschner
Katja eDoerschner
Daniel J. Kersten
Daniel J. Kersten
spellingShingle Tae-Eui eKam
Damien J. Mannion
Damien J. Mannion
Damien J. Mannion
Seong-Whan eLee
Seong-Whan eLee
Katja eDoerschner
Katja eDoerschner
Daniel J. Kersten
Daniel J. Kersten
Human visual cortical responses to specular and matte motion flows
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Classification
Visual Perception
functional magnetic resonance imaging(fMRI)
Surface materials
Motion flow
author_facet Tae-Eui eKam
Damien J. Mannion
Damien J. Mannion
Damien J. Mannion
Seong-Whan eLee
Seong-Whan eLee
Katja eDoerschner
Katja eDoerschner
Daniel J. Kersten
Daniel J. Kersten
author_sort Tae-Eui eKam
title Human visual cortical responses to specular and matte motion flows
title_short Human visual cortical responses to specular and matte motion flows
title_full Human visual cortical responses to specular and matte motion flows
title_fullStr Human visual cortical responses to specular and matte motion flows
title_full_unstemmed Human visual cortical responses to specular and matte motion flows
title_sort human visual cortical responses to specular and matte motion flows
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
issn 1662-5161
publishDate 2015-10-01
description Determining the compositional properties of surfaces in the environment is an important visual capacity. One such property is specular reflectance, which encompasses the range from matte to shiny surfaces. Visual estimation of specular reflectance can be informed by characteristic motion profiles; a surface with a specular reflectance that is difficult to determine while static can be confidently disambiguated when set in motion. Here, we used fMRI to trace the sensitivity of human visual cortex to such motion cues, both with and without photometric cues to specular reflectance. Participants viewed rotating blob-like objects that were rendered as images (photometric) or dots (kinematic) with either matte-consistent or shiny-consistent specular reflectance profiles. We were unable to identify any areas in low and mid-level human visual cortex that responded preferentially to surface specular reflectance from motion. However, univariate and multivariate analyses identified several visual areas; V1, V2, V3, V3A/B, and hMT+, capable of differentiating shiny from matte surface flows. These results indicate that the machinery for extracting kinematic cues is present in human visual cortex, but the areas involved in integrating such information with the photometric cues necessary for surface specular reflectance remain unclear.
topic Classification
Visual Perception
functional magnetic resonance imaging(fMRI)
Surface materials
Motion flow
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2015.00579/full
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