Y Shao
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Y Shao.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
A Papanikolaou; Ga Keliris; Td Papageorgiou; Y Shao; E Krapp; E Papageorgiou; K Stingl; A Bruckmann; Ulrich Schiefer; Nk Logothetis; Stelios M. Smirnakis
Significance Partial damage of the primary visual cortex (V1), or damage to the white matter inputs to V1 (optic radiation), cause blindness in specific regions of the visual field. We use functional MRI to measure responses in individual patients with a localized, chronic V1 injury that resulted in blindness in a quarter of the visual field. The fMRI responses of patients and controls are generally similar, but in some patients differences from controls can be measured. Importantly, responses in spared early visual cortex are not always congruent with visual perception. Understanding how the properties of early visual areas respond to injury will lead to better strategies for visual rehabilitation. Injury to the primary visual cortex (V1) typically leads to loss of conscious vision in the corresponding, homonymous region of the contralateral visual hemifield (scotoma). Several studies suggest that V1 is highly plastic after injury to the visual pathways, whereas others have called this conclusion into question. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to measure area V1 population receptive field (pRF) properties in five patients with partial or complete quadrantic visual field loss as a result of partial V1+ or optic radiation lesions. Comparisons were made with healthy controls deprived of visual stimulation in one quadrant [“artificial scotoma” (AS)]. We observed no large-scale changes in spared-V1 topography as the V1/V2 border remained stable, and pRF eccentricity versus cortical-distance plots were similar to those of controls. Interestingly, three observations suggest limited reorganization: (i) the distribution of pRF centers in spared-V1 was shifted slightly toward the scotoma border in 2 of 5 patients compared with AS controls; (ii) pRF size in spared-V1 was slightly increased in patients near the scotoma border; and (iii) pRF size in the contralesional hemisphere was slightly increased compared with AS controls. Importantly, pRF measurements yield information about the functional properties of spared-V1 cortex not provided by standard perimetry mapping. In three patients, spared-V1 pRF maps overlapped significantly with dense regions of the perimetric scotoma, suggesting that pRF analysis may help identify visual field locations amenable to rehabilitation. Conversely, in the remaining two patients, spared-V1 pRF maps failed to cover sighted locations in the perimetric map, indicating the existence of V1-bypassing pathways able to mediate useful vision.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2013
Y Shao; Ga Keliris; A Papanikolaou; M. Dominik Fischer; Ditta Zobor; Herbert Jägle; Nk Logothetis; Stelios M. Smirnakis
The visual field is retinotopically represented in early visual areas. It has been suggested that when adult primary visual cortex (V1) is deprived of normal retinal input it is capable of large‐scale reorganisation, with neurons inside the lesion projection zone (LPZ) being visually driven by inputs from intact retinal regions. Early functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies in humans with macular degeneration (MD) report > 1 cm spread of activity inside the LPZ border, whereas recent results report no shift of the LPZ border. Here, we used fMRI population receptive field measurements to study, for the first time, the visual cortex organisation of one macaque monkey with MD and to compare it with normal controls. Our results showed that the border of the V1 LPZ remained stable, suggesting that the deafferented area V1 zone of the MD animal has limited capacity for reorganisation. Interestingly, the pRF size of non‐deafferented V1 voxels increased slightly (~20% on average), although this effect appears weaker than that in previous single‐unit recording reports. Area V2 also showed limited reorganisation. Remarkably, area V5/MT of the MD animal showed extensive activation compared to controls stimulated over the part of the visual field that was spared in the MD animal. Furthermore, population receptive field size distributions differed markedly in area V5/MT of the MD animal. Taken together, these results suggest that V5/MT has a higher potential for reorganisation after MD than earlier visual cortex.
Documenta Ophthalmologica | 2012
M. Dominik Fischer; Ditta Zobor; Ga Keliris; Y Shao; Mathias W. Seeliger; Silke Haverkamp; Herbert Jägle; Nk Logothetis; Stelios M. Smirnakis
Journal of Vision | 2012
Stelios M. Smirnakis; Ga Keliris; Y Shao; A Papanikolaou; Nk Logothetis
Archive | 2013
A Papanikolaou; Ga Keliris; Gt Papageorgiou; Y Shao; E Krapp; E Papageorgiou; Ulrich Schiefer; Nk Logothetis; Stelios M. Smirnakis
43rd Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience (Neuroscience 2013) | 2013
Y Shao; Ga Keliris; Michael Schmid; A Papanikolaou; Nk Logothetis; Stelios M. Smirnakis
43rd Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience (Neuroscience 2013) | 2013
Ga Keliris; Y Shao; A Papanikolaou; Nk Logothetis; M Smirnakis
AREADNE 2012: Research in Encoding and Decoding of Neural Ensembles | 2012
A Papanikolaou; Ga Keliris; Dt Papageorgiou; Y Shao; E Krapp; U Schiefer; Nk Logothetis; Sm Smirnakis
41st Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience (Neuroscience 2011) | 2011
Y Shao; Ga Keliris; A Papanikolaou; M Augath; Nk Logothetis; Stelios M. Smirnakis
41st Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience (Neuroscience 2011) | 2011
A Papanikolaou; Ga Keliris; Y Shao; Krapp E, Papageorgiou E, Schiefer U, Logothetis, Nk; Stelios M. Smirnakis