Elsevier

Vision Research

Volume 37, Issue 13, July 1997, Pages 1845-1849
Vision Research

Contrast dependency of motion-onset and pattern-reversal VEPs: Interaction of stimulus type, recording site and response component

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Abstract

We compared the contrast dependency (from 0.4 to 98%) of the visual evoked potential (VEP) to motion onset and to pattern reversal at an occipital and lateral recording site using sinewave grating stimuli of 0.9 c/deg, drifting at 4.9 deg/sec. Two differing VEP components were identified: a positive component, peaking at around 130 msec, dominating the occipital derivation, enhanced in pattern-reversal stimulation, exhibiting a high-threshold, late-saturating contrast response characteristic with a half-amplitude contrast above 7%; and a negative component at around 180 msec, dominating the lateral derivation, enhanced in motion-onset stimulation, exhibiting a low-threshold, saturating contrast characteristic with a half-amplitude contrast below 4%. The results suggest: (1) The negative component (N180) represents motion mechanisms, located more laterally, while the positive component (P100–P130) represents form-processing mechanisms, located near the V1/V2 areas. (2) A pattern-reversal stimulus triggers both form-processing and motion mechanisms that can be discriminated by latency. In an occipital derivation, the clinical reversal VEP P100 will be little contaminated by motion responses.

Keywords

Human
Motion-onset
Pattern-reversal
Contrast
Visually evoked potentials

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