Title: Neural Correlates of Visual Awareness
1Neural Correlates of Visual Awareness
2A Hard Problem
- Are all organisms conscious?
3A Hard Problem
- Are all organisms conscious?
- If not, whats the difference between those that
are and those that are not? - Complexity?
- Language?
- Some peculiar type of memory?
- All of these?
4A Hard Problem
- Really what were asking is
What is it about our brains that makes us
conscious?
5A Hard Problem
- Neuroscientists have deferred some of the
difficulties of that problem by focusing on a
subtly different one - What neural processes are distinctly associated
with consciousness? - That is still a pretty hard problem!
What are the neural correlates of consciousness
(NCC)
6Searching for the NCC
- When a visual stimulus appears
- Visual neurons tuned to aspects of that stimulus
fire action potentials (single unit recording) - Ensemble depolarizations of pyramidal cells in
various parts of visual cortex (and elsewhere)
(ERP, MEG) - Increased metabolic demand ensues in various
parts of the visual cortex (and elsewhere) (fMRI,
PET) - A conscious visual even occurs
7Searching for the NCC
- We can measure all sorts of neural correlates of
these processesso we can see the neural
correlates of consciousness right? - So whats the problem?
8Searching for the NCC
- We can measure all sorts of neural correlates of
these processesso we can see the neural
correlates of consciousness right? - So whats the problem?
- Not all of that neural activity causes
consciousness - We will explore some situations in which neural
activity is dissociated from awareness
9Dorsal and Ventral Pathways
- But first some review and further consideration
of visual pathways
10Dorsal and Ventral Pathways
- Different visual cortex regions contain cells
with different tuning properties represent
different features in the visual field - V5/MT is selectively responsive to motion
- V4 is selectively responsive to color
11Dorsal and Ventral Pathways
- V4 and V5 are doubly-dissociated in lesion
literature Achromatopsia and Akinetopsia,
respectively
12Dorsal and Ventral Pathways
- V4 and V5 are key parts of two larger functional
pathways - Dorsal or Where pathway
- Ventral or What pathway
- Ungerleider and Mishkin (1982)
- Magno and Parvo dichotomy arose at the retina and
gives rise to two distinct cortical pathways
13Dorsal and Ventral Pathways
- Pohl (1973) Early dissociations of Temporal and
Parietal functions - Landmark task
- Monkeys trained to find reward in well near a
landmark - once they get the task the contingency is
switched monkey must find well opposite to the
landmark - errors until relearning indicates ability to use
the spatial relationship information to perform
task
14Dorsal and Ventral Pathways
- Pohl (1973) Early dissociations of Temporal and
Parietal functions - Landmark task
- Dissociates Parietal and Temporal lobes
- Parietal lesions impair relearning of landmark
task
15Dorsal and Ventral Pathways
- Pohl (1973) Early dissociations of Temporal and
Parietal functions - Object task
- Reward location is indicated by one of two
objects - contingency is switched monkey must use other
object - errors to relearn indicates ability to use
object distinction to perform task
16Dorsal and Ventral Pathways
- Pohl (1973) Early dissociations of Temporal and
Parietal functions - Object task
- Adding this task doubly dissociates Parietal and
Temporal lesions - Temporal lesions impair object task
17Dorsal and Ventral Pathways
- do both of these pathways equally contribute
their contents to visual awareness?
V5
V4
18Agnosia
- Lesions (especially in the left hemisphere) of
the inferior temporal cortex lead to disorders of
memory for people and things - recognition and identification are impaired
- prosopagnosia is a specific kind of agnosia
inability to recognize faces - explicit (conscious) decisions about object
features are disrupted
19Agnosia
- Goodale and Milner Patient DF
- Patient could not indicate the orientation of a
slot using her awareness - Patient could move her hand appropriately to
interact with the slot - whether visually guided or guided by an internal
representation in memory
20Agnosia
- Single dissociation of action from conscious
perception - Dorsal pathway remained intact while ventral
pathway was impaired - Dorsal Pathway seems to guide motor actions, at
least for ones that need spatial information - Activity within the Dorsal Pathway seems not to
be sufficient for consciousness
21Blindsight
22Lesions of Retinostriate Pathway
- Lesions (usually due to stroke) cause a region of
blindness called a scotoma - Identified using perimetry
- note macular sparing
X
23Retinocollicular Pathway independently mediates
orienting
- Rafal et al. (1990)
- subjects move eyes to fixate a peripheral target
in two different conditions - target alone
24Retinocollicular Pathway independently mediates
orienting
- Rafal et al. (1990)
- subjects move eyes to fixate a peripheral target
in two different conditions - target alone
- accompanied by distractor
25Retinocollicular Pathway independently mediates
orienting
- Rafal et al. (1990) result
- Subjects were slower when presented with a
distracting stimulus in the scotoma (359 ms vs.
500 ms)
26Retinocollicular Pathway independently mediates
orienting
- Blindsight patients have since been shown to
posses a surprising range of residual visual
abilities - better than chance at detection and
discrimination of some visual features such as
direction of motion - These go beyond simple orienting - how can this
be?
27Retinocollicular Pathway independently mediates
orienting
- Recall that the feed-forward sweep in not a
single wave of information and that it doesnt
only go through V1
- In particular, MT seems to get very early and
direct input
28Retinocollicular Pathway independently mediates
orienting
- Recall that the feed-forward sweep in not a
single wave of information and that it doesnt
only go through V1
- In particular, MT seems to get very early and
direct input - Information represented in dorsal pathway guides
behaviour but doesnt support awareness
29Searching for the NCC
- What is needed is a situation in which a
perceivers state can alternate between aware and
unaware in ways that we can correlate with neural
events - One such situation is called Binocular Rivalry
30Rivalrous Images
- A rivalrous image is one that switches between
two mutually exclusive percepts
31Binocular Rivalry
- What would happen if each eye receives
incompatible input?
Left Eye
Right Eye
32Binocular Rivalry
- What would happen if each eye receives
incompatible input? - The percept is not usually the amalgamation of
the two images. Instead the images are often
rivalrous. - Percept switches between the two possible images
33Binocular Rivalry
- Rivalry does not entail suppression of one eye
and dominance of another it is based on parts
of objects
Stimuli
Left Eye
Right Eye
Percept
Or
34Binocular Rivalry
- Percept alternates randomly (not regularly)
between dominance and suppression - on the order
of seconds - What factors affect dominance and suppression?
Time -gt
35Binocular Rivalry
- Percept alternates randomly (not regularly)
between dominance and suppression - on the order
of seconds - What factors affect dominance and suppression?
- Several features tend to increase the time one
image is dominant (visible) - Higher contrast
- Brighter
- Motion
36Binocular Rivalry
- Percept alternates randomly (not regularly)
between dominance and suppression - on the order
of seconds - What factors affect dominance and suppression?
- Several features tend to increase the time one
image is dominant (visible) - Higher contrast
- Brighter
- Motion
- What are the neural correlates of Rivalry?
37Neural Correlates of Rivalry
- What Brain areas experience rivalry?
- Clever fMRI experiment by Tong et al. (1998)
- Exploit preferential responses by different
regions - Present faces and buildings in alternation
38Neural Correlates of Rivalry
- What Brain areas experience rivalry?
- Clever fMRI experiment by Tong et al. (1998)
- Exploit preferential responses by different
regions - Present faces to one eye and buildings to the
other
39Neural Correlates of Rivalry
- What Brain areas experience rivalry?
- Apparently activity in areas in ventral pathway
correlates with awareness - But at what stage is rivalry first manifested?
- For the answer we need to look to single-cell
recording
40Neural Correlates of Rivalry
- Neurophysiology of Rivalry
- Monkey is trained to indicate which of two images
it is perceiving (by pressing a lever) - One stimulus contains features to which a given
recorded neuron is tuned, the other does not - What happens to neurons when their preferred
stimulus is present but suppressed?
41Neural Correlates of Rivalry
- The theory is that Neurons in the LGN mediate
Rivalry
42Neural Correlates of Rivalry
- The theory is that Neurons in the LGN mediate
Rivalry - NO cells in LGN respond similarly regardless of
whether their input is suppressed or dominant
43Neural Correlates of Rivalry
- V1? V4? V5?
- YES cells in primary and early extra-striate
cortex respond with more action potentials when
their preferred stimulus is dominant relative to
when it is suppressed - However,
- Changes are small
- Cells never stop firing altogether
44Neural Correlates of Rivalry
- Inferior Temporal Cortex (Ventral Pathway)?
- YES cells in IT are strongly correlated with
percept
45Neural Mechanisms of Consciousness?
- So how far does that get us?
- Not all that far we still dont know what is
the mechanism that causes consciousness - But we do know that it is probably distributed
rather than at one locus - Thus the question is what is special about the
activity of networks of neurons that gives rise
to consciousness?