AbstractStudies in primate physiology and human functional neuroimaging have convincingly shown that the area of the brain termed MT/V5+ – which includes the middle temporal visual area MT/V5 along with adjacent motion-sensitive areas such as MST – is involved in the processing of motion information [1,2]. Tootell et al. [3] showed that the blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) signal measured by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in the human MT/V5+ seemingly correlates with the strength of perceived motion aftereffect (MAE), the illusory motion of a stationary pattern that one sees after adapting to a moving pattern [4]. The signal in MT/V5+ decayed slowly during the period when the MAE was seen. It is possible that this slow...
AbstractBackground: Electrophysiological recording from the extrastriate cortex of non-human primate...
Viewing photographs of objects in motion evokes higher fMRI activation in human MT+ than similar pho...
학위논문 (석사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 뇌인지과학과, 2012. 2. 이상훈.The motion aftereffect (MAE) induced by prolonged expos...
AbstractStudies in primate physiology and human functional neuroimaging have convincingly shown that...
AbstractActivation of the human visual motion area V5/MT was previously thought to be the basis of t...
After a prolonged exposure to directional motion (adaptation), a subsequently presented stationary t...
AbstractSeveral fMRI studies have reported MT+ response increases correlated with perception of the ...
AbstractRecent functional imaging studies have identified neural activity that is closely associated...
AbstractUntil recently, it was widely believed that object position and object motion were represent...
Nervous systems adapt to the prevailing sensory environment, and the consequences of this adaptation...
AbstractAdaptation to motion produces a motion aftereffect (MAE), where illusory, oppositely-directe...
In 1971 people defined that an area in macaque’s brain in the depths of the superior temporal sulcus...
Functional imaging has demonstrated the specific involvement of the human middle–temporal complex (h...
NoUntil recently, it was widely believed that object position and object motion were represented ind...
Functional imaging has demonstrated the specific involvement of the human middle–temporal complex (h...
AbstractBackground: Electrophysiological recording from the extrastriate cortex of non-human primate...
Viewing photographs of objects in motion evokes higher fMRI activation in human MT+ than similar pho...
학위논문 (석사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 뇌인지과학과, 2012. 2. 이상훈.The motion aftereffect (MAE) induced by prolonged expos...
AbstractStudies in primate physiology and human functional neuroimaging have convincingly shown that...
AbstractActivation of the human visual motion area V5/MT was previously thought to be the basis of t...
After a prolonged exposure to directional motion (adaptation), a subsequently presented stationary t...
AbstractSeveral fMRI studies have reported MT+ response increases correlated with perception of the ...
AbstractRecent functional imaging studies have identified neural activity that is closely associated...
AbstractUntil recently, it was widely believed that object position and object motion were represent...
Nervous systems adapt to the prevailing sensory environment, and the consequences of this adaptation...
AbstractAdaptation to motion produces a motion aftereffect (MAE), where illusory, oppositely-directe...
In 1971 people defined that an area in macaque’s brain in the depths of the superior temporal sulcus...
Functional imaging has demonstrated the specific involvement of the human middle–temporal complex (h...
NoUntil recently, it was widely believed that object position and object motion were represented ind...
Functional imaging has demonstrated the specific involvement of the human middle–temporal complex (h...
AbstractBackground: Electrophysiological recording from the extrastriate cortex of non-human primate...
Viewing photographs of objects in motion evokes higher fMRI activation in human MT+ than similar pho...
학위논문 (석사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 뇌인지과학과, 2012. 2. 이상훈.The motion aftereffect (MAE) induced by prolonged expos...