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      Specificity and timescales of cortical adaptation as inferences about natural movie statistics

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          Abstract

          Adaptation is a phenomenological umbrella term under which a variety of temporal contextual effects are grouped. Previous models have shown that some aspects of visual adaptation reflect optimal processing of dynamic visual inputs, suggesting that adaptation should be tuned to the properties of natural visual inputs. However, the link between natural dynamic inputs and adaptation is poorly understood. Here, we extend a previously developed Bayesian modeling framework for spatial contextual effects to the temporal domain. The model learns temporal statistical regularities of natural movies and links these statistics to adaptation in primary visual cortex via divisive normalization, a ubiquitous neural computation. In particular, the model divisively normalizes the present visual input by the past visual inputs only to the degree that these are inferred to be statistically dependent. We show that this flexible form of normalization reproduces classical findings on how brief adaptation affects neuronal selectivity. Furthermore, prior knowledge acquired by the Bayesian model from natural movies can be modified by prolonged exposure to novel visual stimuli. We show that this updating can explain classical results on contrast adaptation. We also simulate the recent finding that adaptation maintains population homeostasis, namely, a balanced level of activity across a population of neurons with different orientation preferences. Consistent with previous disparate observations, our work further clarifies the influence of stimulus-specific and neuronal-specific normalization signals in adaptation.

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          Repetition and the brain: neural models of stimulus-specific effects.

          One of the most robust experience-related cortical dynamics is reduced neural activity when stimuli are repeated. This reduction has been linked to performance improvements due to repetition and also used to probe functional characteristics of neural populations. However, the underlying neural mechanisms are as yet unknown. Here, we consider three models that have been proposed to account for repetition-related reductions in neural activity, and evaluate them in terms of their ability to account for the main properties of this phenomenon as measured with single-cell recordings and neuroimaging techniques. We also discuss future directions for distinguishing between these models, which will be important for understanding the neural consequences of repetition and for interpreting repetition-related effects in neuroimaging data.
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            Some informational aspects of visual perception.

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              Normalization of cell responses in cat striate cortex.

              D. Heeger (1992)
              Simple cells in the striate cortex have been depicted as half-wave-rectified linear operators. Complex cells have been depicted as energy mechanisms, constructed from the squared sum of the outputs of quadrature pairs of linear operators. However, the linear/energy model falls short of a complete explanation of striate cell responses. In this paper, a modified version of the linear/energy model is presented in which striate cells mutually inhibit one another, effectively normalizing their responses with respect to stimulus contrast. This paper reviews experimental measurements of striate cell responses, and shows that the new model explains a significantly larger body of physiological data.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                J Vis
                J Vis
                jovi
                jovi
                jovi
                Journal of Vision
                The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology
                1534-7362
                3 October 2016
                2016
                : 16
                : 13
                : 1
                Affiliations
                michoel.snow@ 123456med.einstein.yu.edu
                ruben.coen-cagli@ 123456einstein.yu.edu

                https://sites.google.com/site/rubencoencagli/
                odelia@ 123456cs.miami.edu

                http://www.cs.miami.edu/home/odelia/
                [1]Department of Systems and Computational Biology, and Dominick Purpura Department of Neuroscience, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY, USA
                [3]Department of Basic Neuroscience, University of Geneva, Switzerland Department of Systems and Computational Biology, and Dominick Purpura Department of Neuroscience, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY, USA
                [4]Department of Computer Science, University of Miami, Miami, FL, USA Dominick Purpura Department of Neuroscience, and Department of Systems and Computational Biology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY, USA
                Article
                jovi-16-11-13 JOV-05031-2015
                10.1167/16.13.1
                5054764
                27699416
                79613364-8c21-4fd7-901b-dec976ecf651

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 25 September 2015
                Categories
                Article

                adaptation,bayesian,scene statistics,divisive normalization

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