AI Article Synopsis

  • The brain processes each half of the visual world individually, but it can seamlessly follow moving objects as they cross from one side to the other.
  • Covert tracking of objects creates different brain activity patterns in response to whether the tracked object is on the same side (ipsilateral) or the opposite side (contralateral) of the visual field, specifically measured as contralateral delay activity (CDA).
  • When an object crosses the midline, the initially tracking hemisphere continues to represent it briefly, while the other hemisphere starts to pick it up before the object fully crosses, indicating that the representation of the object can momentarily overlap in both hemispheres, especially when the crossing is expected.

Article Abstract

Each cerebral hemisphere initially processes one half of the visual world. How are moving objects seamlessly tracked when they traverse visual hemifields? Covert tracking of lateralized objects evokes a difference between slow-wave electrophysiological activity observed from contralateral and ipsilateral electrodes in occipitoparietal regions. This event-related potentials (ERP) waveform, known as contralateral delay activity (CDA) [1, 2], is sensitive to the number of objects tracked [1, 2] and responds dynamically to changes in this quantity [3]. When a tracked object crosses the midline, an inversion in CDA polarity revealed the dropping of the object's representation by one hemisphere and its acquisition by the other. Importantly, our data suggest that the initially tracking hemisphere continues to represent the object for a period after that object crosses the midline. Meanwhile, the receiving hemisphere begins to represent the object before the object crosses the midline, leading to a period in which the object is represented by both hemispheres. Further, this overlap in representation is reduced if the midline crossing is unpredictable. Thus, this process is sensitive to observer expectations and does not simply reflect overlapping receptive fields near the midline.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4061693PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2014.03.054DOI Listing

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