Hello,
Please join us tomorrow at 11am for this week's YNiC seminar (Wednesday
13th). We have an external speaker *Dr Marc Himmelberg* from New York
University who will be presenting a talk titled *"**Linking cortical
magnification in primary visual cortex to visual perception and neural
encoding"* (see below for the talk abstract).
We look forward to seeing you in YNiC open plan, or via zoom using the
following link:
https://york-ac-uk.zoom.us/j/98866434382?pwd=Rr68mJPN8g8R0oVbhRQG4Kr1R0ZdKn…
<https://www.google.com/url?q=https://york-ac-uk.zoom.us/j/98866434382?pwd%3DRr68mJPN8g8R0oVbhRQG4Kr1R0ZdKn.1&sa=D&source=calendar&ust=1731752561955139&usg=AOvVaw35Doe5RfKFBYZ-BCBj7xW7>
Many thanks,
Jennifer
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Linking cortical magnification in primary visual cortex to visual
perception and neural encoding
Human visual cortex preserves the structure of the retinal image in
cortical maps. fMRI has made it possible to measure these retinotopic maps
from visually evoked activity in the visual cortex, including primary
visual cortex (V1). Cortical magnification (i.e., mm2 of V1 surface
area/deg2 visual space) can be measured by combining fMRI retinotopic maps
with MRI measurements of cortical surface area. Cortical magnification is
greatest at the center of the V1 visual field representation and declines
with eccentricity. Cortical magnification also markedly varies with polar
angle; it is greater at the horizontal than vertical, and lower than upper
vertical meridian of V1 visual field representation. Further, V1 cortical
magnification varies up to 3-fold when comparing among individual
observers. I will present two projects that harness this location- and
observer-dependent variability in cortical magnification to better
understand the link between the organisation of V1 and: (1) visual
perception; and (2) neural encoding. First, I will present work showing
that, when measured as a function of polar angle, V1 cortical magnification
parallels behavioural measurements of contrast sensitivity at the group and
individual level, demonstrating a tight link between brain and behaviour.
Second, I will present recent work showing that a 2D model accounts for
location-dependent variation in V1 neural properties –cortical
magnification and preferred spatial frequency. I will then show that V1
cortical magnification and preferred spatial frequency covary –and scale–
to different extents when measured as a function of eccentricity, polar
angle, and individual observer, demonstrating a link between V1 neural
resources and neural encoding.
--
Jennifer Ashton, PhD
Senior Research Technician
York Neuroimaging Centre