Abstract

Self-motion perception involves an interaction between vestibular and visual brain regions. In the lateral brain, it includes the parietoinsular vestibular cortex and the posterior insular cortex. In the medial cortex, the cingulate sulcus visual (CSv) area is known to process visual-vestibular cues. Here, we show that the vestibular-visual network of the medial cortex extends beyond area CSv. We examined brain activations of 36 healthy right-handed participants by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during stimulation with caloric vestibular, thermal, or visual motion cues. Consistent with previous research, we found that area CSv responded to both vestibular and visual cues but not to thermal cues. Moreover, the V6 complex and the precuneus motion (PcM) area responded primarily to (laminar-translational) visual motion cues. However, we also observed a region inferior to CSv within the pericallosal sulcus (vicinity of anterior retrosplenial) that primarily responded to vestibular cues. This vestibular pericallosal sulcus (vPCS) region did not respond to either visual or thermal cues. It was also distinct from a more posterior motion-sensitive region in the retrosplenial complex (mRSC) that responded to (radial) visual motion but not to vestibular and thermal cues. Together, our results suggest that the vestibular-visual network in the medial cortex not only includes areas CSv, PcM, and the V6 complex but also two additional brain regions adjacent to the callosum. These two brain regions exhibit similarities in terms of their locations and responses to vestibular and visual cues with self-motion-related brain regions recently described in nonhuman primates.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Self-motion perception involves several vestibular and visual cortical regions. Within the medial cortex, the cingulate sulcus visual (CSv) area, the precuneus motion (PcM) area, and the V6 complex respond selectively to self-motion cues. Here, we show that vestibular information is also processed in the pericallosal sulcus (vPCS), whereas (radial) visual motion information is associated with activation in the retrosplenial cortex (mRSC).

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