The role of cortical area V4 in complex shape discriminations
was studied by testing the effects of V4 lesions in macaques
on the ability to visually discriminate between images
of three-dimensional (3D) objects from different viewpoints.
Stimuli were presented in pairs in the lower left or lower
right visual field quadrants about 4 deg from the fovea,
and the monkeys judged on each trial whether the two views
were of the same or of different objects. Object similarity
was varied to determine a threshold shape difference. V4
lesions caused profound, retinotopic, and apparently permanent
disruptions of discrimination, regardless of whether the
images represented single or multiple viewpoints. In V4
lesioned portions of the visual field, monkeys could discriminate
objects only when they differed much more grossly in shape
than was true in control locations. These effects of the
lesion were virtually identical for discriminations that
had been learned before lesions were placed and for those
learned afterwards. As in previous studies, V4 lesions
elevated contrast thresholds by approximately a factor
of two, but control observations showed that this was not
the basis of the disruption of shape discrimination. Manipulation
of cues to shape showed that in control locations, monkeys
maintained excellent shape discrimination despite a variety
of stimulus alterations, whereas in V4 lesioned areas their
performance was easily disrupted. This finding suggests
that V4 may support visual shape discriminations by facilitating
the use of multiple visual cues. However, the fact that
single-viewpoint and multiple-viewpoint discriminations
were similarly affected indicates that the disruption was
not specific to 3D shape discrimination, but may apply
to a variety of subtle discriminations.