Detection of Glass pattern configurations by the primary visual cortex


Autoria(s): Berry, David
Data(s)

30/01/2017

30/01/2017

01/04/2016

Resumo

The neurons in the primary visual cortex that respond to the orientation of visual stimuli were discovered in the late 1950s (Hubel, D.H. & Wiesel, T.N. 1959. J. Physiol. 148:574-591) but how they achieve this response is poorly understood. Recently, experiments have demonstrated that the visual cortex may use the image processing techniques of cross or auto-correlation to detect the streaks in random dot patterns (Barlow, H. & Berry, D.L. 2010. Proc. R. Soc. B. 278: 2069-2075). These experiments made use of sinusoidally modulated random dot patterns and of the so-called Glass patterns - where randomly positioned dot pairs are oriented in a parallel configuration (Glass, L. 1969. Nature. 223: 578-580). The image processing used by the visual cortex could be inferred from how the threshold of detection of these patterns in the presence of random noise varied as a function of the dot density in the patterns. In the present study, the detection thresholds have been measured for other types of patterns including circular, hyperbolic, spiral and radial Glass patterns and an indication of the type of image processing (cross or auto-correlation) by the visual cortex is presented. As a result, it is hoped that this study will contribute to an understanding of what David Marr called the ‘computational goal’ of the primary visual cortex (Marr, D. 1982. Vision: A Computational Investigation into the Human Representation and Processing of Visual Information. New York: Freeman.)

Identificador

Berry, DL. Detection of Glass pattern configurations by the primary visual cortex, Proceedings do Congresso Internacional de Optometria e Ciências da Visão, Braga, Portugal (2016).

http://hdl.handle.net/10174/20205

nao

nao

sim

dberry@uevora.pt

356

Idioma(s)

por

Publicador

Proceedings do Congresso Internacional de Optometria e Ciências da Visão

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Human visual processing #Visual cortex #Glass patterns #cross and auto correlation
Tipo

lecture