“…The visual receptive fields of 7a neurons are large and in many cases bilateral (Blatt et al, 1990), and can be driven either by stationary visual stimuli (Yin and Mountcastle, 1977; Robinson et al, 1978; Motter and Mountcastle, 1981; Mountcastle et al, 1981; Constantinidis and Steinmetz, 2001a, 2005) or moving visual stimuli (Motter et al, 1987; Steinmetz et al, 1987; Merchant et al, 2001, 2003, 2004a,b; Raffi and Siegel, 2007). Motion sensitive receptive fields of area 7a neurons often exhibit a radial arrangement of preferred directions throughout their receptive field (Motter and Mountcastle, 1981; Steinmetz et al, 1987), such that these neurons are maximally activated by either expanding or contracting patterns of optic flow (Siegel and Read, 1997; Merchant et al, 2001, 2003; Raffi and Siegel, 2007), as occurs when the observer moves through a fixed visual environment. It has been recently noted that visual motion information in parietal area 7a could be used to derive the positions of visual landmarks and the location of the observer with respect to those landmarks, a type of spatial processing important for navigation and spatial orientation (Kravitz et al, 2011).…”