Temporal Encoding of Spatial Information during Active Visual Fixation

被引:148
作者
Kuang, Xutao [1 ]
Poletti, Martina [1 ]
Victor, Jonathan D. [3 ]
Rucci, Michele [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Boston Univ, Dept Psychol, Boston, MA 02215 USA
[2] Boston Univ, Program Neurosci, Boston, MA 02215 USA
[3] Weill Cornell Med Coll, Dept Neurol & Neurosci, New York, NY 10065 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会; 美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
RETINAL GANGLION-CELL; EYE-MOVEMENTS; NEURAL ACTIVITY; MICROSACCADES; CORTEX; DYNAMICS; STRIATE; NEURONS;
D O I
10.1016/j.cub.2012.01.050
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Humans and other species continually perform microscopic eye movements, even when attending to a single point [1-3]. These movements, which include drifts and microsaccades, are under oculomotor control [2, 4, 5], elicit strong neural responses [6-11], and have been thought to serve important functions [12-16]. The influence of these fixational eye movements on the acquisition and neural processing of visual information remains unclear. Here, we show that during viewing of natural scenes, microscopic eye movements carry out a crucial information-processing step: they remove predictable correlations in natural scenes by equalizing the spatial power of the retinal image within the frequency range of ganglion cells' peak sensitivity. This transformation, which had been attributed to center-surround receptive field organization [17-19], occurs prior to any neural processing and reveals a form of matching between the statistics of natural images and those of normal eye movements. We further show that the combined effect of microscopic eye movements and retinal receptive field organization is to convert spatial luminance discontinuities into synchronous firing events, beginning the process of edge detection. Thus, microscopic eye movements are fundamental to two goals of early visual processing: redundancy reduction [20, 21] and feature extraction.
引用
收藏
页码:510 / 514
页数:5
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