Cortical synchronization and perceptual framing

被引:48
作者
Grossberg, S
Grunewald, A
机构
[1] Division of Biology, California Institute of Technology, Mail Code 216-76, Pasadena
[2] Boston University, Dept. of Cogn. and Neural Systems, Boston, MA 02215
关键词
D O I
10.1162/jocn.1997.9.1.117
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
How does the brain group together different parts of an object into a coherent visual object representation? Different parts of an object may be processed by the brain at different rates and may thus become desynchronized. Perceptual framing is a process that resynchronizes cortical activities corresponding to the same retinal object. A neural network model is presented that is able to rapidly resynchronize desynchronized neural activities. The model provides a link between perceptual and brain data. Model properties quantitatively simulate perceptual framing data, including psychophysical data about temporal order judgments and the reduction of threshold contrast as a function of stimulus length. Such a model has earlier been used to explain data about illusory contour formation, texture segregation, shape-from-shading, 3-D vision, and cortical receptive fields. The model hereby shows how many data may be understood as manifestations of a cortical grouping process that can rapidly resynchronize image parts that belong together in visual object representations. The model exhibits better synchronization in the presence of noise than without noise, a type of stochastic resonance, and synchronizes robustly when cells that represent different stimulus orientations compete. These properties arise when fast long-range cooperation and slow short-range competition interact via nonlinear feedback interactions with cells that obey shunting equations.
引用
收藏
页码:117 / 132
页数:16
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