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Edge-Related Activity Is Not Necessary to Explain Orientation Decoding in Human Visual Cortex.

Susan G WardleJ Brendan RitchieKiley J SeymourThomas A Carlson
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
A significant theoretical limitation of multivariate pattern analysis in neuroscience is the ambiguity in interpreting the source of decodable information used by classifiers. For example, orientation can be decoded from BOLD activation patterns in human V1, even though orientation columns are at a finer spatial scale than 3T fMRI. Consequently, the source of decodable information remains controversial. Here we test the proposal that information related to the stimulus edges underlies orientation decoding. We map voxel population receptive fields in V1 and evaluate orientation decoding performance as a function of stimulus location in retinotopic cortex. We find orientation is decodable from voxels whose receptive fields do not overlap with the stimulus edges, suggesting edge-related activity does not substantially drive orientation decoding.
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