eprintid: 2864 rev_number: 6 eprint_status: archive userid: 69 dir: disk0/00/00/28/64 datestamp: 2015-11-10 11:08:27 lastmod: 2016-09-13 09:45:17 status_changed: 2015-11-10 11:08:27 type: article metadata_visibility: show creators_name: Costagli, Mauro creators_name: Ueno, Kenichi creators_name: Sun, Pei creators_name: Gardner, Justin L. creators_name: Wan, Xiaohong creators_name: Ricciardi, Emiliano creators_name: Pietrini, Pietro creators_name: Tanaka, Keiji creators_name: Cheng, Kang creators_id: creators_id: creators_id: creators_id: creators_id: creators_id: emiliano.ricciardi@imtlucca.it creators_id: pietro.pietrini@imtlucca.it creators_id: creators_id: title: Functional Signalers of Changes in Visual Stimuli: Cortical Responses to Increments and Decrements in Motion Coherence ispublished: pub subjects: RC0321 divisions: CSA full_text_status: none keywords: fMRI, hMT, hV4, Motion coherence, Visual cortex note: Open Access article - Fulltext on publisher's website abstract: How does our brain detect changes in a natural scene? While changes by increments of specific visual attributes, such as contrast or motion coherence, can be signaled by an increase in neuronal activity in early visual areas, like the primary visual cortex (V1) or the human middle temporal complex (hMT+), respectively, the mechanisms for signaling changes resulting from decrements in a stimulus attribute are largely unknown. We have discovered opposing patterns of cortical responses to changes in motion coherence: unlike areas hMT+, V3A and parieto-occipital complex (V6+) that respond to changes in the level of motion coherence monotonically, human areas V4 (hV4), V3B, and ventral occipital always respond positively to both transient increments and decrements. This pattern of responding always positively to stimulus changes can emerge in the presence of either coherence-selective neuron populations, or neurons that are not tuned to particular coherences but adapt to a particular coherence level in a stimulus-selective manner. Our findings provide evidence that these areas possess physiological properties suited for signaling increments and decrements in a stimulus and may form a part of cortical vigilance system for detecting salient changes in the environment. date: 2014 date_type: published publication: Cerebral Cortex volume: 24 number: 1 publisher: Oxford University press pagerange: 110-118 id_number: 10.1093/cercor/bhs294 refereed: TRUE issn: 1047-3211 official_url: http://cercor.oxfordjournals.org/content/24/1/110.abstract citation: Costagli, Mauro and Ueno, Kenichi and Sun, Pei and Gardner, Justin L. and Wan, Xiaohong and Ricciardi, Emiliano and Pietrini, Pietro and Tanaka, Keiji and Cheng, Kang Functional Signalers of Changes in Visual Stimuli: Cortical Responses to Increments and Decrements in Motion Coherence. Cerebral Cortex, 24 (1). pp. 110-118. ISSN 1047-3211 (2014)