Binocular neurons

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Binocular neurons are neurons in the visual system that assist in the creation of stereopsis from binocular disparity. They have been found in the primary visual cortex where the initial stage of binocular convergence begins.[1][2] Binocular neurons receive inputs from both the right and left eyes and integrate the signals together to create a perception of depth.

In the 19th century Charles Wheatstone determined that retinal disparity was a large contributor to depth perception.[1] Using a stereoscope, he showed that horizontal disparity is used by the brain to calculate the relative depths of different objects in 3-dimensional space in reference to a fixed point. This process is called stereopsis. Two main classes of cells in visual cortex were identified by David H. Hubel and Torsten Wiesel in 1962 through their investigation of the cat's primary visual cortex.[3] These classes were called simple and complex cells, which differ in how their receptive fields respond to light and dark stimuli. Béla Julesz in 1971 used random dot stereograms to find that monocular depth cues, such as shading, are not required for stereoscopic vision.[1] Disparity selective cells were first recorded in the striate cortex (V1) of the cat by Peter Orlebar Bishop and John Douglas Pettigrew in the late 1960s,[1] however this discovery was unexpected and was not published until 1986.[4] These disparity selective cells, also known as binocular neurons, were again found in the awake behaving macaque monkey in 1985.[5] Additionally, population responses of binocular neurons have been found in human ventral and dorsal pathways using fMRI.[6]

Neuroanatomy

The dorsal pathway (green) and ventral pathway (purple) are shown. They originate from the primary visual cortex. Binocular neurons are found throughout both pathways.

Both the dorsal and ventral pathways contribute to the perception of depth.[7] Binocular neurons, in the sense of being activated by stimuli in either eye, are first found in the visual cortex in layer 4.[7][8] Binocular neurons appear in the striate cortex (V1), the prestriate cortex (V2), the ventral extrastriate area (V4), the dorsal extrastriate area (V5/MT), medial superior temporal area, caudal intraparietal area, and a collection of areas in the anterior inferior temporal cortex.[7] Neurons in the prestriate cortex (V2) are more sensitive to different disparities than those in the striate cortex (V1).[7] Binocular neurons in the striate cortex (V1) are only sensitive to absolute disparity, where in other visual cortical areas they are sensitive to relative disparity.[7][9]

In the prestriate cortex (V2) and ventral extrastriate area (V4), binocular neurons respond most readily to a centre-surround stimulus.[7] A centre-surround stimulus consists of a fixed object with another object rotating in a circle around the fixed object. Areas in the anterior inferior temporal cortex respond to surface curvature.[7] Binocular neurons in both the caudal intraparietal area and the dorsal extrastriate area (V5/MT) respond to surface slants.[7] Binocular neurons in both the medial superior temporal area and dorsal extrastriate area (V5/MT) respond to surface depth sparation.[clarification needed][7] On one hand, the anticorrelated response of the binocular neurons in the striate cortex (V1), the prestriate cortex (V2), dorsal extrastriate area (V5/MT), and medial superior temporal area, all show similar responses.[7] On the other hand, binocular neurons in the ventral extrastriate area (V4) show weaker anticorrelated responses in comparison to the other areas. Finally, areas in the anterior inferior temporal cortex do not show any anticorrelated response.[7]

Function

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI