| Brain's Visual Cortex Doesn't 'Tell' All It Knows | |
MINNEAPOLIS / ST. PAUL--The print on a page may be too fine to read, but that
doesn't mean your brain can't discern the pattern of lines. New research by
scientists at the University of Minnesota and the University of California at
San Diego (UCSD) has shown that neurons in the human visual cortex, a brain
center that processes visual information, can respond to patterns of lines too
fine for subjects to resolve. The work reveals that some types of visual
information, while not consciously perceived, are still conveyed closer to the
brain's center(s) of consciousness than was previously thought. The discovery
contributes to the understanding of vision and has implications for the age-old
question of consciousness. The work will be published in the May 24 issue of
Nature.
"This is probably the first demonstration that visual cortical neurons are
capable of resolving fine lines past the limits previously thought to exist,"
said Sheng He, assistant professor of psychology at the University of Minnesota
and first author of the Nature paper. His coauthor is Donald MacLeod of UCSD.
Everyone with normal vision can perceive patterns of lines up to a certain
point. But when the spacing of lines becomes too fine, the lines seem to
disappear and only a uniform blur is seen. Previously, vision researchers
thought this limitation was due to optical blurring in the eye--that is, a
failure of the retina to resolve the lines. Now, at least some of the blurring
has been shown to occur in the visual cortex, said He.
The researchers studied the responses of two subjects to patterns of lines
projected directly onto their retinas by lasers. The lines were either
horizontal or vertical. It has been known for some time that certain neurons in
the visual cortex respond preferentially to either vertical lines, horizontal
lines or in-between orientations. With enough neurons responding to every
conceivable orientation, humans can perceive lines that run in any direction. It
has also been known that when human subjects are shown a pattern of vertical or
horizontal lines for several seconds and then shown a second grid of lines, they
are better able to perceive the orientation of the second grid if it is
perpendicular to the original one. The reason is that the neurons responding to,
say, a vertical grid become fatigued and have trouble perceiving a second
vertical grid. But the neurons that respond to horizontal lines are fresh and
respond strongly.
He and MacLeod observed this phenomenon in their subjects. But when they
projected lines so fine that they were slightly, but definitely, past the
subjects' ability to resolve, the subjects exhibited the same difficulty
perceiving a second grid of clearly visible lines with the same orientation.
This, said He, is evidence that the cortical neurons geared to that orientation
were perceiving the lines the first time, when the lines were invisible to the
subjects. Therefore, the subjects' inability to see the too-fine lines must be
due to a blurring that occurs after the visual cortex receives input.
The visual cortex lies in the rear of the cerebrum. He said that researchers
elsewhere have hypothesized that people cannot become aware of optical
information unless it reaches the frontal area of the cortex. The work of He and
MacLeod is consistent with this theory, He said. The blurring of lines appears
to be due to processes inside the visual cortex that prevent some information
from reaching other cortical areas and consciousness.
"This suggests that not everything in the cortex can become conscious
knowledge," said He. "Your visual cortex isn't telling you everything." The work
was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the Alfred P. Sloan
Foundation.
---University of Minnesota
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