The Development of the Map from the Nucleus Isthmi: The Influence of Visual Experience on the Formation of Orderly Connections in the Visual System

Author(s):  
Susan Boymel Udin
Author(s):  
Wen-Han Zhu ◽  
Wei Sun ◽  
Xiong-Kuo Min ◽  
Guang-Tao Zhai ◽  
Xiao-Kang Yang

AbstractObjective image quality assessment (IQA) plays an important role in various visual communication systems, which can automatically and efficiently predict the perceived quality of images. The human eye is the ultimate evaluator for visual experience, thus the modeling of human visual system (HVS) is a core issue for objective IQA and visual experience optimization. The traditional model based on black box fitting has low interpretability and it is difficult to guide the experience optimization effectively, while the model based on physiological simulation is hard to integrate into practical visual communication services due to its high computational complexity. For bridging the gap between signal distortion and visual experience, in this paper, we propose a novel perceptual no-reference (NR) IQA algorithm based on structural computational modeling of HVS. According to the mechanism of the human brain, we divide the visual signal processing into a low-level visual layer, a middle-level visual layer and a high-level visual layer, which conduct pixel information processing, primitive information processing and global image information processing, respectively. The natural scene statistics (NSS) based features, deep features and free-energy based features are extracted from these three layers. The support vector regression (SVR) is employed to aggregate features to the final quality prediction. Extensive experimental comparisons on three widely used benchmark IQA databases (LIVE, CSIQ and TID2013) demonstrate that our proposed metric is highly competitive with or outperforms the state-of-the-art NR IQA measures.


Author(s):  
Joseph Levine

There are two basic philosophical problems about colour. The first concerns the nature of colour itself. That is, what sort of property is it? When I say of the shirt that I am wearing that it is red, what sort of fact about the shirt am I describing? The second problem concerns the nature of colour experience. When I look at the red shirt I have a visual experience with a certain qualitative character – a ‘reddish’ one. Thus colour seems in some sense to be a property of my sensory experience, as well as a property of my shirt. What sort of mental property is it? Obviously, the two problems are intimately related. In particular, there is a great deal of controversy over the following question: if we call the first sort of property ‘objective colour’ and the second ‘subjective colour’, which of the two, objective or subjective colour, is basic? Or do they both have an independent ontological status? Most philosophers adhere to the doctrine of physicalism, the view that all objects and events are ultimately constituted by the fundamental physical particles, properties and relations described in physical theory. The phenomena of both objective and subjective colour present problems for physicalism. With respect to objective colour, it is difficult to find any natural physical candidate with which to identify it. Our visual system responds in a similar manner to surfaces that vary along a wide range of physical parameters, even with respect to the reflection of light waves. Yet what could be more obvious than the fact that objects are coloured? In the case of subjective colour, the principal topic of this entry, there is an even deeper puzzle. It is natural to think of the reddishness of a visual experience – its qualitative character – as an intrinsic and categorical property of the experience. Intrinsic properties are distinguished from relational properties in that an object’s possession of the former does not depend on its relation to, or even the existence of, other objects, whereas its possession of the latter does. Categorical properties are distinguished from dispositional ones. A dispositional property is one that an object has by virtue of its tendency to behave in certain ways, or cause certain effects, in particular circumstances. So being brittle is dispositional in that it involves being liable to break under slight pressure, whereas being six feet tall, say, is categorical. If subjective colour is intrinsic and categorical, then it would seem to be a neural property of a brain state. But what sort of neural property could explain the reddishness of an experience? Furthermore, reduction of subjective colour to a neural property would rule out even the possibility that forms of life with different physiological structures, or intelligent robots, could have experiences of the same qualitative type as our experiences of red. While some philosophers endorse this consequence, many find it quite implausible. Neural properties seem best suited to explain how certain functions are carried out, and therefore it might seem better to identify subjective colour with the property of playing a certain functional role within the entire cognitive system realized by the brain. This allows the possibility that structures physically different from human brains could support colour experiences of the same type as our own. However, various puzzles undermine the plausibility of this claim. For instance, it seems possible that two people could agree in all their judgements of relative similarity and yet one sees green where the other sees red. If this ‘inverted spectrum’ case is a genuine logical possibility, as many philosophers advocate, then it appears that subjective colour must not be a matter of functional role, but rather an intrinsic property of experience. Another possibility is that qualitative character is just a matter of features the visual system, in the case of colour, is representing objects in the visual field to have. Reddish experiences are just visual representations of red. But this view too has problems with spectrum-inversion scenarios, and also entails some counterintuitive consequences concerning our knowledge of our own qualitative states. Faced with the dilemmas posed by subjective colour for physicalist doctrine, some philosophers opt for eliminativism, the doctrine that subjective colour is not a genuine, or real, phenomenon after all. On this view the source of the puzzle is a conceptual confusion; a tendency to extend our judgements concerning objective colour, what appear to be intrinsic and categorical properties of the surfaces of physical objects, onto the properties of our mental states. Once we see that nothing qualitative is happening ‘inside’, we will understand why we cannot locate any state or property of the brain with which to identify subjective colour. The controversy over the nature of subjective colour is part of a wider debate about the subjective aspect of conscious experience more generally. How does the qualitative character of experience – what it is like to see, hear and smell – fit into a physicalist scientific framework? At present all of the options just presented have their adherents, and no general consensus exists.


2011 ◽  
Vol 31 (22) ◽  
pp. 8025-8036 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Xu ◽  
A. S. Khakhalin ◽  
A. V. Nurmikko ◽  
C. D. Aizenman

2001 ◽  
Vol 21 (11) ◽  
pp. 3923-3931 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graeme S. Pollock ◽  
Elizabeth Vernon ◽  
M. Elizabeth Forbes ◽  
Qiao Yan ◽  
Yun-Tao Ma ◽  
...  

eLife ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael J Arcaro ◽  
Margaret S Livingstone

The adult primate visual system comprises a series of hierarchically organized areas. Each cortical area contains a topographic map of visual space, with different areas extracting different kinds of information from the retinal input. Here we asked to what extent the newborn visual system resembles the adult organization. We find that hierarchical, topographic organization is present at birth and therefore constitutes a proto-organization for the entire primate visual system. Even within inferior temporal cortex, this proto-organization was already present, prior to the emergence of category selectivity (e.g., faces or scenes). We propose that this topographic organization provides the scaffolding for the subsequent development of visual cortex that commences at the onset of visual experience


1991 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 185-192 ◽  
Author(s):  
Warren J. Scherer ◽  
Susan B. Udin

AbstractIn the South African clawed-toed frog Xenopus laevis, visual experience plays a crucial role in the formation of matching binocular maps in the tectum. The ipsilateral eye's projection, relayed through the crossed isthmotectal projection, displays marked plasticity in response to altered visual input during a critical period of development. This plasticity and the events responsible for the end of the critical period are mediated by N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor function. We have previously reported that chronic blockade of tectal NMDA receptors with the NMDA antagonist 5-amino-phosphonovaleric acid (APV) prevents plasticity of the crossed isthmotectal projection during the critical period, while chronic treatment with NMDA restores this plasticity after the end of the critical period. These results raise the question of whether the effects on plasticity are due to changes in electrical responsiveness of the treated tissue. In this study, we have quantitatively assessed the actions of APV and NMDA on certain aspects of tectal cell activity in Xenopus during and after the critical period by recording the output of the nucleus isthmi cells that are activated by the tectum after three weeks of treatment. We have found that chronic APV treatment does not alter tectal output, as indicated by the firing of isthmotectal axons, during the critical period and that chronic NMDA treatment increases tectal output in postcritical period Xenopus. Tectal output does not differ between normal Xenopus during and after the end of the critical period.These results indicate that the effect of APV on blocking isthmotectal plasticity is not due to a nonspecific inhibition of the segment of the retinotectal relay that activates the nucleus isthmi. The enhancement of tectal output in postcritical period Xenopus by chronic NMDA treatment may promote the effectiveness of NMDA in restoring isthmotectal plasticity after the end of the critical period, but the finding that tectal activity does not differ between normal Xenopus during and after the critical period implies that a reduction in tectal activity in not the cause of the loss of plasticity at the end of the critical period.


1973 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 535-I ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald E. Mitchell ◽  
Ralph D. Freeman ◽  
Michel Millodot ◽  
Gunilla Haegerstrom

2017 ◽  
Vol 30 (3-5) ◽  
pp. 235-251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabel Arend ◽  
Avishai Henik

The visual system successfully binds the shapes and colours of objects; therefore, our visual experience regarding the objects around us is coherent. However, this binding process can break down when attention is diverted, producing illusory conjunctions (ICs); for example, when presented with a red 2 and a green 5, the observer may report a green 2 and a red 5. The strongest observation of binding in human cognition is found in synaesthesia. In grapheme–colour synaesthesia, linguistic stimuli (e.g., letters or numbers) are strongly associated with colours. It is debatable whether these highly stable bindings constitute a form of early binding that occurs outside the focus of attention. We examined for the first time the occurrence of ICs in grapheme–colour synaesthesia. Experiment 1 replicated our previous finding, showing the effects of numerical distance on ICs (Arend et al., Psychon. Bull. Rev. 2013, 20, 1181–1186). Participants viewed a display containing two centrally presented letters and two coloured numbers and were asked to report: (1) whether the letters were same/different, (2) the colour of the larger number, and (3) the level of confidence concerning the colour of the number. Experiment 2 used a modified version of this task. Synaesthetes () and controls () viewed number–colour pairs that were congruent or incongruent with that of the synaesthetic association. Grapheme–colour synaesthesia significantly affected ICs on incongruent but not on congruent trials. Our findings strongly support the notion that shape and colour are free-floating features in synaesthesia, similar to what is observed in normal cognition.


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