Abstract

We introduce a new VEP paradigm - the Jitter Spatial Frequency (JSF) Sweep VEP - that permits efficient mapping of the spatiotemporal tuning of the developmental motion asymmetry (DMA). Vertical sinewave gratings undergoing 90o horizontal oscillatory displacements (6 or 10 Hz) were presented while their SF was swept over 2 to 5 octaves during each VEP trial. JSF sweep VEPs were recorded from 28 infants (8-43 weeks), and symmetric (second-harmonic, F2) and asymmetric (F1) components of the VEP were measured. JSF sweeps can provide four useful estimates: (1,2) the high-SF cutoff of F1 and F2 responses estimates the spatial resolution of direction-selective (DS) and non-DS mechanisms, respectively; (3) the low-SF cutoff for F1 estimate the SF-boundary between mature (F1 absent) and immature (F1 present) DS mechanisms; and (4) the F1 high-SF cutoff estimates the lower velocity limit of cortical DS cells. For 6 Hz, the low-SF F1 cutoffs increased two times faster than traditional (contrast-reversal) VEP grating acuity (0.5 vs ~0.25 octaves/month), and twice that of the high-SF F1 and F2 cutoffs. This implies that no single mechanism can account for the DMA at both low and high SFs. At 10 Hz, the DMA exhibited no significant development, consistent with slower maturation of DS mechanisms at higher ST frequencies. The F2 high-SF cutoffs were higher than F1 at both 6 and 10 Hz, suggesting higher spatial resolution for non-DS (pattern) vs DS (motion) mechanisms. Finally, the lower velocity limit of the DS mechanisms decreased from ~2 deg/sec at 8 weeks, to 0.75 deg/sec at 33 weeks, similar to analogous limits for direction-of-motion identification in adults (~0.5 - 1 deg/sec), and close to prior VEP estimates in infants (0.6 deg/sec).

Highlights

  • Developmental studies of motion processing and directional selectivity are of interest for several reasons

  • The spatiotemporal domain of motion detection in adults is demarcated roughly by spatiotemporal frequency combinations corresponding to a velocity limit of ~0.51 deg/sec; below this velocity, motion is generally not perceived at contrast threshold

  • At this age and for the TF used, the infant has a robust F1 response in the low-SF range of the Jitter Spatial Frequency (JSF) sweep

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Developmental studies of motion processing and directional selectivity are of interest for several reasons. Mature visual sensitivity appears to be mediated by motion sensitive mechanisms at low spatial, high temporal frequencies, but by non-directional selective mechanisms at relatively high spatial, and low temporal frequencies (Legge, 1978; Levinson & Sekuler, 1975; Pasternak, 1987; Pasternak & Leinen, 1986; Watson, Thompson, Murphy, & Nachmias, 1980). These spatiotemporal zones have been associated with the psychophysically identified “transient” and

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call