2014
DOI: 10.1523/jneurosci.1034-14.2014
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Motion Direction Biases and Decoding in Human Visual Cortex

Abstract: Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have relied on multivariate analysis methods to decode visual motion direction from measurements of cortical activity. Above-chance decoding has been commonly used to infer the motion-selective response properties of the underlying neural populations. Moreover, patterns of reliable response biases across voxels that underlie decoding have been interpreted to reflect maps of functional architecture. Using fMRI, we identified a direction-selective response bia… Show more

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Cited by 49 publications
(68 citation statements)
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“…This in turn might give a false impression of columnar sampling. The question of the origin and spatial scale of the patterning of fMRI signals is still under debate (Alink et al, 2013;Wang et al, 2014). Patterning also has been observed for high-level visual features, such as object stimuli in occipito-temporal cortex ( Figure 1H; Haxby et al, 2001) or for reward representations in orbitofrontal cortex ( Figure 2H, bottom left; Kahnt et al, 2010).…”
Section: Spatial Patterning Of Fmri Signalsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This in turn might give a false impression of columnar sampling. The question of the origin and spatial scale of the patterning of fMRI signals is still under debate (Alink et al, 2013;Wang et al, 2014). Patterning also has been observed for high-level visual features, such as object stimuli in occipito-temporal cortex ( Figure 1H; Haxby et al, 2001) or for reward representations in orbitofrontal cortex ( Figure 2H, bottom left; Kahnt et al, 2010).…”
Section: Spatial Patterning Of Fmri Signalsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They demonstrated the responses to particular stimuli in voxels in V1 were correlated with the corresponding visual field angle for those voxels. They reported that the large-scale bias they had observed, rather than a smaller-scale bias introduced by the voxel sampling, was sufficient to drive the decoding of orientation information with multivariate methods (see also Beckett, Peirce et al 2012, Wang, Merriam et al 2014). In particular, we were interested to test how much data we would need to replicate the results from Freeman, Brouwer et al (2011) when using high resolution 7T with dynamic shimming methods (described above) -3.375 mm 3 compared to the previous study of 8 mm 3…”
Section: High Spatial Resolution Mapping Of Somatosensory Cortexmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, anisotropies in the response to direction of motion have been shown to change as a function of eccentricity in early visual cortex (Maloney et al, 2014;Raemaekers et al, 2009;Schellekens et al, 2013;Wang et al, 2014). Given this, a control analysis examined the orientation response at different eccentricities in visual cortex.…”
Section: Eccentricity Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%