Murakami, I. (1995).
Motion aftereffect after monocular adaptation to filled-in motion at the blind spot.
Vision Research, 35, 1041-1045.
Although the blind spot encodes no visual information, one never
perceives an odd blob or blank there, but sees a complete scene
of the world even when viewing monocularly. This phenomenon
called "filling-in" might be related to mechanisms essential to
surface perception, but the neural representation has still been
unclear. To determine at what stage the computation for
filling-in is established in the visual system, whether prolonged
observation of a filled-in motion including the blind spot of one
eye could cause motion aftereffect at the corresponding visual
field of the other eye was examined. The result was
positive--interocular transfer of motion aftereffect was
obtained at the tested eye. This finding suggests the possibility
that real motion and filled-in motion share a common motion
pathway in an early stage in the human visual system.