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      Evolving Concepts of Spatial Channels in Vision: From Independence to Nonlinear Interactions

      1 , 2
      Perception
      Pion Ltd

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          Abstract

          By the 1960s it was evident from neuroanatomy that there were extensive recurrent interactions, both excitatory and inhibitory, among visual cortical neurons. Nevertheless, the psychophysical discovery of 'spatial-frequency channels' gave rise to a decade in which parallel, independent channels were thought to subserve early spatial vision. Recent work, however, has clearly demonstrated that early visual channels do not perform a Fourier or wavelet decomposition of the image. Instead, they interact through a variety of nonlinear pooling mechanisms. Such nonlinear interactions perform important computations in texture perception, stereopsis, and motion and form vision.

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          Most cited references83

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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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            Application of fourier analysis to the visibility of gratings

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              On the existence of neurones in the human visual system selectively sensitive to the orientation and size of retinal images.

              1. It was found that an occipital evoked potential can be elicited in the human by moving a grating pattern without changing the mean light flux entering the eye. Prolonged viewing of a high contrast grating reduces the amplitude of the potential evoked by a low contrast grating.2. This adaptation to a grating was studied psychophysically by determining the contrast threshold before and after adaptation. There is a temporary fivefold rise in contrast threshold after exposure to a high contrast grating of the same orientation and spatial frequency.3. By determining the rise of threshold over a range of spatial frequency for a number of adapting frequencies it was found that the threshold elevation is limited to a spectrum of frequencies with a bandwidth of just over an octave at half amplitude, centred on the adapting frequency.4. The amplitude of the effect and its bandwidth are very similar for adapting spatial frequencies between 3 c/deg. and 14 c/deg. At higher frequencies the bandwidth is slightly narrower. For lower adapting frequencies the peak of the effect stays at 3 c/deg.5. These and other findings suggest that the human visual system may possess neurones selectively sensitive to spatial frequency and size. The orientational selectivity and the interocular transfer of the adaptation effect implicate the visual cortex as the site of these neurones.6. This neural system may play an essential preliminary role in the recognition of complex images and generalization for magnification.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Perception
                Perception
                Pion Ltd
                0301-0066
                1468-4233
                August 1997
                August 1997
                June 25 2016
                August 1997
                : 26
                : 8
                : 939-960
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Visual Sciences Center, University of Chicago, 939 East 57th Street, Chicago, IL 60637, USA
                [2 ]Department of Psychology, McGill University, 1205 Dr Penfield Avenue, Montreal, QC H3A 1B1, Canada
                Article
                10.1068/p260939
                9509156
                ff28b354-8d30-4546-a7f5-77a9a08df499
                © 1997

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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