Contrary to the traditional view that receptive fields are
limited in spatial extent, recent studies have indicated that
the response of neurons to a local stimulus within the receptive
field can be modulated by stimulation of the surrounding region.
Here we quantified the nature of these contextual effects on
visual motion responses of neurons in the pigeon's optic
tectum using standard extracellular recording techniques. All
of the cells tested responded well to a test spot moving across
their receptive fields. When a background pattern was moved
in the same or in a similar direction as that of the test spot,
the responses of most deep tectal neurons to the test spot were
maximally inhibited. Movement of the background in the opposite
or near opposite direction produced minimal inhibition or even
facilitation. For some deep tectal neurons, this directionally
selective modulation by the moving background was maintained
when the background motion was paired with different movement
directions of the test spot (including both the preferred and
least preferred directions). Thus, this selectivity for opposing
motion was independent of the absolute direction of either the
test spot or the background, a finding which is consistent with
the results reported by Frost and Nakayama (1983), although
they did not include all test spot directions. For some other
neurons, identified here for the first time, the background
movement selectively modulated the response only when the test
spot moved in the neuron's preferred directions. These
neurons lost selectivity for opposing motion when the test spot
moved in nonpreferred directions. The significance of these
contextual effects on the motion response of tectal neurons
may be related to how the brain distinguishes self-induced motion
from object motion and segregates figure from ground.