scholarly journals Spatial contextual effects in primary visual cortex limit feature representation under crowding

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher A. Henry ◽  
Adam Kohn
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Federica Capparelli ◽  
Klaus Pawelzik ◽  
Udo Ernst

AbstractA central goal in visual neuroscience is to understand computational mechanisms and to identify neural structures responsible for integrating local visual features into global representations. When probed with complex stimuli that extend beyond their classical receptive field, neurons display non-linear behaviours indicative of such integration processes already in early stages of visual processing. Recently some progress has been made in explaining these effects from first principles by sparse coding models with a neurophysiologically realistic inference dynamics. They reproduce some of the complex response characteristics observed in primary visual cortex, but only when the context is located near the classical receptive field, since the connection scheme they propose include interactions only among neurons with overlapping input fields. Longer-range interactions required for addressing the plethora of contextual effects reaching beyond this range do not exist. Hence, a satisfactory explanation of contextual phenomena in terms of realistic interactions and dynamics in visual cortex is still missing. Here we propose an extended generative model for visual scenes that includes spatial dependencies among different features. We derive a neurophysiologically realistic inference scheme under the constraint that neurons have direct access to only local image information. The scheme can be interpreted as a network in primary visual cortex where two neural populations are organized in different layers within orientation hypercolumns that are connected by local, short-range and long-range recurrent interactions. When trained with natural images, the model predicts a connectivity structure linking neurons with similar orientation preferences matching the typical patterns found for long-ranging horizontal axons and feedback projections in visual cortex. Subjected to contextual stimuli typically used in empirical studies our model replicates several hallmark effects of contextual processing and predicts characteristic differences for surround modulation between the two model populations. In summary, our model provides a novel framework for contextual processing in the visual system proposing a well-defined functional role for horizontal axons and feedback projections.Author summaryAn influential hypothesis about how the brain processes visual information posits that each given stimulus should be efficiently encoded using only a small number of cells. This idea led to the development of a class of models that provided a functional explanation for various response properties of visual neurons, including the non-linear modulations observed when localized stimuli are placed in a broader spatial context. However, it remains to be clarified through which anatomical structures and neural connectivities a network in the cortex could perform the computations that these models require. In this paper we propose a model for encoding spatially extended visual scenes. Imposing the constraint that neurons in visual cortex have direct access only to small portions of the visual field we derive a simple yet realistic neural population dynamics. Connectivities optimized for natural scenes conform with anatomical findings and the resulting model reproduces a broad set of physiological observations, while exposing the neural mechanisms relevant for spatio-temporal information integration.


2011 ◽  
Vol 24 (10) ◽  
pp. 1022-1035 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shigeru Tanaka ◽  
Chan-Hong Moon ◽  
Mitsuhiro Fukuda ◽  
Seong-Gi Kim

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