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In Neuroscience bulletin

During natural viewing, we often recognize multiple objects, detect their motion, and select one object as the target to track. It remains to be determined how such behavior is guided by the integration of visual form and motion perception. To address this, we studied how monkeys made a choice to track moving targets with different forms by smooth pursuit eye movements in a two-target task. We found that pursuit responses were biased toward the motion direction of a target with a hole. By computing the relative weighting, we found that the target with a hole exhibited a larger weight for vector computation. The global hole feature dominated other form properties. This dominance failed to account for changes in pursuit responses to a target with different forms moving singly. These findings suggest that the integration of visual form and motion perception can reshape the competition in sensorimotor networks to guide behavioral selection.

Dou Huixi, Wang Huan, Liu Sainan, Huang Jun, Liu Zuxiang, Zhou Tiangang, Yang Yan

2023-Jan-23

Global hole feature, Monkeys, Sensorimotor transformation, Smooth pursuit eye movements, Visual form perception, Visual motion perception