Intact "biological motion" and "structure from motion" perception in a patient with impaired motion mechanisms: a case study.

Abstract:

:A series of psychophysical tests examining early and later aspects of image-motion processing were conducted in a patient with bilateral lesions involving the posterior visual pathways, affecting the lateral parietal-temporal-occipital cortex and the underlying white matter (as shown by magnetic resonance imaging studies and confirmed by neuro-ophthalmological and neuropsychological examinations). Visual acuity, form discrimination, color, and contrast-sensitivity discrimination were normal whereas spatial localization, line bisection, depth, and binocular stereopsis were severely impaired. Performance on early motion tasks was very poor. These include seeing coherent motion in random noise (Newsome & Paré, 1988), speed discrimination, and seeing two-dimensional form from relative speed of motion. However, on higher-order motion tasks the patient was able to identify actions from the evolving pattern of dots placed at the joints of a human actor (Johansson, 1973) as well as discriminating three-dimensional structure of a cylinder from motion in a dynamic random-dot field. The pattern of these results is at odds with the hypothesis that precise metrical comparison of early motion measurements is necessary for higher-order "structure from motion" tasks.

journal_name

Vis Neurosci

journal_title

Visual neuroscience

authors

Vaina LM,Lemay M,Bienfang DC,Choi AY,Nakayama K

doi

10.1017/s0952523800000444

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

1990-10-01 00:00:00

pages

353-69

issue

4

eissn

0952-5238

issn

1469-8714

pii

S0952523800000444

journal_volume

5

pub_type

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