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Distinct fMRI Responses to Self-Induced versus Stimulus Motion during Free Viewing in the Macaque.

Brian E RussTakaaki KanekoKadharbatcha S SaleemRebecca A BermanDavid A Leopold
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
Visual motion arises not only from events in the external world, but also from the movements of the observer. For example, even if objects are stationary in the world, the act of walking through a room or shifting one's eyes causes motion on the retina. This "reafferent" motion propagates into the brain as signals that must be interpreted in the context of real object motion. The delineation of whole-brain responses to stimulus versus self-generated retinal motion signals is critical for understanding visual perception and is of pragmatic importance given the increasing use of naturalistic viewing paradigms. The present study uses fMRI to demonstrate that the brain exhibits a fundamentally different pattern of responses to these two sources of retinal motion.
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