Abstract

BackgroundA recent behavioral study demonstrated that the meaningful interaction of two agents enhances the detection sensitivity of biological motion (BM), however, it remains unclear when and how the 'interaction' information of two agents is represented in our neural system. To clarify this point, we used magnetoencephalography and introduced a novel experimental technique to extract a neuromagnetic response relating to two-agent BM perception. We then investigated how this response was modulated by the interaction of two agents. In the present experiment, we presented two kinds of visual stimuli (interacting and non-interacting BM) with two orientations (upright and inverted).ResultsWe found a neuromagnetic response in the bilateral occipitotemporal region, on average 300 – 400 ms after the onset of a two-agent BM stimulus. This result showed that interhemispheric differences were apparent for the peak amplitudes. For the left hemisphere, the orientation effect was manifest when the two agents were made to interact, and the interaction effect was manifest when the stimulus was inverted. In the right hemisphere, the main effects of both orientation and interaction were significant, suggesting that the peak amplitude was attenuated when the visual stimulus was inverted or made to interact.ConclusionThese results demonstrate that the 'interaction' information of two agents can affect the neural activities in the bilateral occipitotemporal region, on average 300 – 400 ms after the onset of a two-agent BM stimulus, however, the modulation was different between hemispheres: the left hemisphere is more concerned with dynamics, whereas the right hemisphere is more concerned with form information.

Highlights

  • A recent behavioral study demonstrated that the meaningful interaction of two agents enhances the detection sensitivity of biological motion (BM), it remains unclear when and how the 'interaction' information of two agents is represented in our neural system

  • Activity is lower for interactive than for swapped displays. These results demonstrated that the 'interaction' information of two agents can affect the neural activities in the bilateral occipitotemporal region, the modulation can be different between hemispheres

  • We used MEG and introduced a novel experimental technique to extract a neuromagnetic response relating to twoagent BM perception

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Summary

Introduction

A recent behavioral study demonstrated that the meaningful interaction of two agents enhances the detection sensitivity of biological motion (BM), it remains unclear when and how the 'interaction' information of two agents is represented in our neural system To clarify this point, we used magnetoencephalography and introduced a novel experimental technique to extract a neuromagnetic response relating to two-agent BM perception. BMC Neuroscience 2009, 10:39 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2202/10/39 stimulus, a recent behavioral study used a 'two-agent' BM stimulus and demonstrated that synchronization of two agent interaction enhances the performance of point-light motion detection [5] This finding indicates that a higher level of visual motion information, such as 'meaningful interaction' of two agents, can affect the detection sensitivity of BM. How is a unique visual stimulus, such as 'interaction' of two-agent information, represented in our neural system? Would this neural activity be modulated whether the two agents are interacting or not?

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