“…Some of these additional regions are assumed to be associated with the dorsal visual stream, which is not too surprising given that the experimental paradigms adopted typically tap motion processing in the context of action planning, saccadic movements or attention, all preferentially engage the dorsal pathway (Newsome et al, 1989;Treue and Maunsell, 1996;Newsome, 1997). Although ventral stream regions have also been implicated in motion processing (De Valois et al, 2000;Tolias et al, 2005;Lu et al, 2010;Li et al, 2013), and there have been suggestions that intact motion perception relies on a combination of dorsal and ventral-related contributions (De Valois et al, 2000), and that ventral cortex might be important for slow motion while dorsal cortex is important for fast motion (Gegenfurtner and Hawken, 1996;Thompson et al, 2006;Hayward et al, 2011), the necessary role of ventral visual cortex in motion perception has not been demonstrated. Our findings implicate ventral visual cortex in central motion perception; this is true, critically, not only for slow motion (at 0.055-0.08 /s, as in the motion detection task, or 5.4 /s in the motion coherence task), but also for very fast motions (motion coherence at 27.27 /s).…”