# Early spatiotemporal dynamics of navigational affordance coding in the dorsal visual cortex

**Authors:** Elisa Zamboni, Rebecca Lowndes, Richard Aveyard, Catriona L. Scrivener, Jessica A. Teed, Yumeng Ma, Antony B. Morland, Edward H. Silson

PMC · DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-68111-7 · Nature Communications · 2026-01-08

## TL;DR

The study shows that the brain quickly identifies navigable routes in scenes using the dorsal visual cortex, even with brief visual stimuli.

## Contribution

The study identifies the dorsal early visual cortex as the likely locus for rapid navigational affordance coding.

## Key findings

- Navigational affordance coding occurs rapidly (~110 ms) in the dorsal early visual cortex.
- Navigational affordances become robust with stimulus durations exceeding 132 milliseconds.
- Whole-brain analyses suggest the dorsal early visual cortex is more critical than previously thought for affordance coding.

## Abstract

Successful navigation requires extracting navigationally relevant signals from a dynamically changing visual environment. The process by which we identify navigable routes through the environment is termed navigational affordances. Here, using a combination of functional magnetic resonance imaging, magnetoencephalography and behavioural testing we report that the extraction of such navigational affordance information likely takes place rapidly within dorsal early visual cortex before higher-level scene selective regions. Whilst we replicate prior work showing the involvement of the occipital place area in navigational affordance coding, whole-brain analyses indicate the most likely cortical locus to be dorsal early visual cortex. Analyses comparing the spatiotemporal pattern of navigational affordances suggest such information is detectable within ~110 milliseconds post stimulus onset. Finally, through varying the presentation durations of scenes, we demonstrate that navigational affordance representations are emergent, but not strong with stimulus durations as short as 33-66 milliseconds but become robust with stimulus durations >132 milliseconds. Taken together these data challenge previous views regarding the critical cortical locus for navigational affordance coding and suggest that such affordances can be extracted from very briefly presented stimuli.

Navigational affordances describe our ability to identify routes of egress within scenes. Here, the authors show that this process likely occurs in early dorsal visual cortex and that such navigational affordances can emerge following brief presentation times.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** RDM (MESH:C535501)
- **Species:** Mus musculus (house mouse, species) [taxon 10090], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12876848/full.md

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12876848/full.md

## References

8 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12876848/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12876848