The visual system in the brain is an anticipatory system: In order to hit a tennis ball during a match, parts of the brain calculate the future trajectory of the ball based on its past travel through the air to enable you to hit the ball. Previous research has shown that the visual system of the brain preplays information about this future trajectory based on previous experience.This pattern completion is preceding the expected trajectory, meaning that the brain activity arises before the actual movement of the ball would happen. This makes this so-called visual preplay an anticipating mechanism.
In this project, the researcher investigated this visual preplay in more detail, aiming at a better understanding of both the visual and memory system as well as its interplay. How does the visual system anticipate such visual movement or other recurring visual events? How is this linked with memory — and where are those memories stored? Answering these questions will tell us more about how the human brain anticipates the world around it. Ultimately, this knowledge can help us in gaining a better understanding of disorders and diseases in which this mechanism might be impaired.