Brain Learning and Recognition: The Large and the Small of It in Inferotemporal Cortex


Autoria(s): Grossberg, Stephen; Markowitz, Jeffrey; Cao, Yongqiang
Data(s)

14/11/2011

14/11/2011

22/06/2009

Resumo

Anterior inferotemporal cortex (ITa) plays a key role in visual object recognition. Recognition is tolerant to object position, size, and view changes, yet recent neurophysiological data show ITa cells with high object selectivity often have low position tolerance, and vice versa. A neural model learns to simulate both this tradeoff and ITa responses to image morphs using large-scale and small-scale IT cells whose population properties may support invariant recognition.

CELEST, an NSF Science of Learning Center (SBE-0354378); SyNAPSE program of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (HR0011-09-3-0001, HR0011-09-C-0011)

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/2144/1973

Idioma(s)

en_US

Publicador

Boston University Center for Adaptive Systems and Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems

Relação

BU CAS/CNS Technical Reports;CAS/CNS-TR-2009-009

Direitos

Copyright 2009 Boston University. Permission to copy without fee all or part of this material is granted provided that: 1. The copies are not made or distributed for direct commercial advantage; 2. the report title, author, document number, and release date appear, and notice is given that copying is by permission of BOSTON UNIVERSITY TRUSTEES. To copy otherwise, or to republish, requires a fee and / or special permission.

Boston University Trustees

Tipo

Technical Report