Detecting biological motion signals in human and monkey superior colliculus: a subcortical-cortical pathway for biological motion perception.

IF 14.7 1区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
Xiqian Lu, Zhaoqi Hu, Yumeng Xin, Tianshu Yang, Ying Wang, Peng Zhang, Ning Liu, Yi Jiang
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Abstract

Most vertebrates, including humans, are highly adept at detecting and encoding biological motion, even when it is portrayed by just a few point lights attached to the head and major joints. However, the function of subcortical regions in biological motion perception has been scarcely explored. Here, we investigate the role of the superior colliculus in local biological motion processing. Using high-field (3 T) and ultra-high-field (7 T) functional magnetic resonance imaging, we record the neural responses of the superior colliculus to scrambled point-light walkers (with local kinematics retained) in both humans and male macaque monkeys. Results show that the superior colliculus, especially the superficial layers, selectively responds to local biological motion. Furthermore, dynamic causal modeling analysis reveals a subcortical-cortical functional pathway that transmits local biological motion signals from the superior colliculus via the middle temporal visual complex to the posterior superior temporal sulcus in the human brain. These findings suggest the existence of a cross-species mechanism in the superior colliculus that facilitates the detection of local biological motion at the early stage of the visual processing stream.

Abstract Image

检测人类和猴子上丘的生物运动信号:生物运动感知的皮层下-皮层通路。
包括人类在内的大多数脊椎动物都非常善于检测和编码生物运动,即使运动只是由连接在头部和主要关节上的几个点光源描绘出来的。然而,皮层下区域在生物运动感知中的功能却鲜有研究。在这里,我们研究了上丘在局部生物运动处理中的作用。利用高场(3 T)和超高场(7 T)功能磁共振成像技术,我们记录了人类和雄性猕猴的上丘对扰乱点光步行者(保留局部运动学)的神经反应。结果表明,上丘,尤其是浅层,会选择性地对局部生物运动做出反应。此外,动态因果建模分析揭示了皮层下-皮层功能通路,该通路将局部生物运动信号从上丘经中颞视觉复合体传输到人脑的后颞上沟。这些发现表明,上丘存在一种跨物种机制,有助于在视觉处理流的早期阶段检测局部生物运动。
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来源期刊
Nature Communications
Nature Communications Biological Science Disciplines-
CiteScore
24.90
自引率
2.40%
发文量
6928
审稿时长
3.7 months
期刊介绍: Nature Communications, an open-access journal, publishes high-quality research spanning all areas of the natural sciences. Papers featured in the journal showcase significant advances relevant to specialists in each respective field. With a 2-year impact factor of 16.6 (2022) and a median time of 8 days from submission to the first editorial decision, Nature Communications is committed to rapid dissemination of research findings. As a multidisciplinary journal, it welcomes contributions from biological, health, physical, chemical, Earth, social, mathematical, applied, and engineering sciences, aiming to highlight important breakthroughs within each domain.
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