Abstract
Visual recognition is limited by both object size (acuity) and spacing. The spacing limit, called “crowding”, is the failure to recognize an object in the presence of other objects. Here, we take advantage of individual differences in crowding behavior to investigate its biological basis. Crowding distance, the minimum object spacing needed for recognition, varies 2-fold among healthy adults. We test the conjecture that this variation in psychophysical crowding distance is due to variation in cortical map size. To test this, we made paired measurements of brain and behavior in 50 observers. We used psychophysics to measure crowding distance and calculate λ, the number of letters that fit into each observer’s visual field without crowding. In the same observers, we used fMRI to measure the surface area A (mm²) of retinotopic maps V1, V2, V3, and V4. Across observers, λ is proportional to the surface area of V4 but is uncorrelated with the surface area of V1 to V3. The proportional relationship of λ to area of V4 indicates conservation of cortical crowding distance across individuals: letters can be recognized if they are spaced by at least 1.4 mm on the V4 map, irrespective of map size and psychophysical crowding distance. We conclude that the size of V4 predicts the spacing limit of visual perception.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
New figures and new manuscript. We modified the paper to include longer discussion.