The temporal-summation characteristics of the human visual cortex were investigated by recording the magnetic responses to isoluminant red-green gratings. In one condition, exposure duration (ED) of a single-pulse stimulus was varied between 16.7 ms and 200 ms, and in the other, stimulus-onset-asynchrony (SOA) of a double-pulse (presented for 16.7 ms each) stimulus was varied between 16.7 ms and 200 ms. The magnetic responses showed an initial peak at a latency of around 100 ms, the origin of which was estimated to be in the vicinity of the striate cortex. The peak amplitude increased with increasing ED and decreased with increasing SOA, showing a clear sign of temporal summation. The critical ED and SOA estimated from the peak amplitude vs. ED/SOA functions were about 50 ms. These values indicate the upper limit of temporal summation for chromatic stimuli in the human early visual cortex.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00001756-200209160-00014 | DOI Listing |
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