Review
Nature Reviews Neuroscience 7, 220-231 (March 2006) | doi:10.1038/nrn1869
There is a Correspondence (October 2006) associated with this Article.
The neural mechanisms of perceptual filling-in
Hidehiko Komatsu1 About the author
Abstract
Filling-in is a perceptual phenomenon in which a visual attribute such as colour, brightness, texture or motion is perceived in a region of the visual field even though such an attribute exists only in the surround. Filling-in dramatically reveals the dissociation between the retinal input and the percept, and raises fundamental questions about how these two relate to each other. Filling-in is observed in various situations, and is an essential part of our normal surface perception. Here, I review recent experiments examining brain activities associated with filling-in, and discuss possible neural mechanisms underlying this remarkable perceptual phenomenon. The evidence shows that neuronal activities in early visual cortical areas are involved in filling-in, providing new insights into visual cortical functions.
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Author affiliations
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National Institute for Physiological Sciences and Graduate University for Advanced Studies (SOKENDAI), Myodaiji, Okazaki, Aichi, Japan.
Email: komatsu@nips.ac.jp
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