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1.
J Exp Biol ; 227(14)2024 Jul 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38887077

RESUMEN

Cuttlefish skin is a powerful rendering device, capable of producing extraordinary changes in visual appearance over a broad range of temporal scales. This unique ability is typically associated with camouflage; however, cuttlefish often produce skin patterns that do not appear connected with the surrounding environment, such as fast large-scale fluctuations with wave-like characteristics. Little is known about the functional significance of these dynamic patterns. In this study, we developed novel tools for analyzing pattern dynamics, and demonstrate their utility for detecting changes in feeding state that occur without concomitant changes in sensory stimulation. Under these conditions, we found that the dynamic properties of specific pattern components differ for different feeding states, despite no measurable change in the overall expression of those components. Therefore, these dynamic changes are not detectable by conventional analyses focusing on pattern expression, requiring analytical tools specifically targeted to pattern dynamics.


Asunto(s)
Decapodiformes , Animales , Decapodiformes/fisiología , Conducta Alimentaria/fisiología , Piel/metabolismo
2.
J Vis ; 24(3): 3, 2024 Mar 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38441884

RESUMEN

Humans acquire sensory information via fast, highly specialized detectors: For example, edge detectors monitor restricted regions of visual space over timescales of 100-200 ms. Surprisingly, this study demonstrates that their operation is nevertheless shaped by the ecological consistency of slow global statistical structure in the environment. In the experiments, humans acquired feature information from brief localized elements embedded within a virtual environment. Cast shadows are important for determining the appearance and layout of the environment. When the statistical reliability of shadows was manipulated, human feature detectors implicitly adapted to these changes over minutes, adjusting their response properties to emphasize either "image-based" or "object-based" anchoring of local visual elements. More specifically, local visual operators were more firmly anchored around object representations when shadows were reliable. As shadow reliability was reduced, visual operators disengaged from objects and became anchored around image features. These results indicate that the notion of sensory adaptation must be reframed around complex statistical constructs with ecological validity. These constructs far exceed the spatiotemporal selectivity bandwidth of sensory detectors, thus demonstrating the highly integrated nature of sensory processing during natural behavior.


Asunto(s)
Sensación , Humanos , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados
3.
J Comput Neurosci ; 49(1): 1-20, 2021 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33123952

RESUMEN

The optimal template for signal detection in white additive noise is the signal itself: the ideal observer matches each stimulus against this template and selects the stimulus associated with largest match. In the noisy ideal observer, internal noise is added to the decision variable returned by the template. While the ideal observer represents an unrealistic approximation to the human visual process, the noisy ideal observer may be applicable under certain experimental conditions. For template values constrained to lie within a specified range, theory predicts that the template associated with a noisy ideal observer should be a clipped image of the signal, a result which we demonstrate analytically using variational calculus. It is currently unknown whether the human process conforms to theory. We report a targeted analysis of the theoretical prediction for an experimental protocol that maximizes template-matching on the part of human participants. We find indicative evidence to support the theoretical expectation when internal noise is compared across participants, but not within each participant. Our results indicate that implicit knowledge about internal variability in different individuals is reflected by their detection templates; no implicit knowledge is retained for internal-noise fluctuations experienced by a given participant during data collection. The results also indicate that template encoding is constrained by the dynamic range of weight specification, rather than the range of output values transduced by the template-matching process.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Neurológicos , Detección de Señal Psicológica , Humanos
4.
J Vis ; 21(5): 9, 2021 05 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33974037

RESUMEN

Artistic composition (the structural organization of pictorial elements) is often characterized by some basic rules and heuristics, but art history does not offer quantitative tools for segmenting individual elements, measuring their interactions and related operations. To discover whether a metric description of this kind is even possible, we exploit a deep-learning algorithm that attempts to capture the perceptual mechanism underlying composition in humans. We rely on a robust behavioral marker with known relevance to higher-level vision: orientation judgements, that is, telling whether a painting is hung "right-side up." Humans can perform this task, even for abstract paintings. To account for this finding, existing models rely on "meaningful" content or specific image statistics, often in accordance with explicit rules from art theory. Our approach does not commit to any such assumptions/schemes, yet it outperforms previous models and for a larger database, encompassing a wide range of painting styles. Moreover, our model correctly reproduces human performance across several measurements from a new web-based experiment designed to test whole paintings, as well as painting fragments matched to the receptive-field size of different depths in the model. By exploiting this approach, we show that our deep learning model captures relevant characteristics of human orientation perception across styles and granularities. Interestingly, the more abstract the painting, the more our model relies on extended spatial integration of cues, a property supported by deeper layers.


Asunto(s)
Aprendizaje Profundo , Pinturas , Señales (Psicología) , Humanos , Juicio , Percepción
5.
PLoS Biol ; 15(8): e1002611, 2017 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28827801

RESUMEN

The structure of the physical world projects images onto our eyes. However, those images are often poorly representative of environmental structure: well-defined boundaries within the eye may correspond to irrelevant features of the physical world, while critical features of the physical world may be nearly invisible at the retinal projection. The challenge for the visual cortex is to sort these two types of features according to their utility in ultimately reconstructing percepts and interpreting the constituents of the scene. We describe a novel paradigm that enabled us to selectively evaluate the relative role played by these two feature classes in signal reconstruction from corrupted images. Our measurements demonstrate that this process is quickly dominated by the inferred structure of the environment, and only minimally controlled by variations of raw image content. The inferential mechanism is spatially global and its impact on early visual cortex is fast. Furthermore, it retunes local visual processing for more efficient feature extraction without altering the intrinsic transduction noise. The basic properties of this process can be partially captured by a combination of small-scale circuit models and large-scale network architectures. Taken together, our results challenge compartmentalized notions of bottom-up/top-down perception and suggest instead that these two modes are best viewed as an integrated perceptual mechanism.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Neurológicos , Neuronas/fisiología , Retina/fisiología , Neuronas Retinianas/fisiología , Visión Ocular , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Percepción Visual , Algoritmos , Biomarcadores/análisis , Mapeo Encefálico , Electroencefalografía , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Red Nerviosa/fisiología , Procesamiento Espacial , Campos Visuales , Vías Visuales/fisiología
6.
Anim Cogn ; 23(1): 41-53, 2020 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31586279

RESUMEN

We currently have limited knowledge about complex visual representations in teleosts. For the specific case of Siamese fighting fish (Betta splendens), we do not know whether they can represent much more than mere colour or size. In this study, we assess their visual capabilities using increasingly complex stimulus manipulations akin to those adopted in human psychophysical studies of higher-level perceptual processes, such as face recognition. Our findings demonstrate a surprisingly sophisticated degree of perceptual representation. Consistent with previous work in established teleost models like zebrafish (Danio rerio), we find that fighting fish can integrate different features (e.g. shape and motion) for visually guided behaviour; this integration process, however, operates in a more holistic fashion in the fighting fish. More specifically, their analysis of complex spatiotemporal patterns is primarily global rather than local, meaning that individual stimulus elements must cohere into an organized percept for effective behavioural drive. The configural nature of this perceptual process is reminiscent of how mammals represent socially relevant signals, notwithstanding the lack of cortical structures that are widely recognized to play a critical role in higher cognitive processes. Our results indicate that mammalian-centric accounts of social cognition present serious conceptual limitations, and in so doing they highlight the importance of understanding complex perceptual function from a general ethological perspective.


Asunto(s)
Peces , Conducta Social , Animales , Color
7.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 14(12): e1006585, 2018 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30513091

RESUMEN

Contrast is the most fundamental property of images. Consequently, any comprehensive model of biological vision must incorporate this attribute and provide a veritable description of its impact on visual perception. Current theoretical and computational models predict that vision should modify its characteristics at low contrast: for example, it should become broader (more lowpass) to protect from noise, as often demonstrated by individual neurons. We find that the opposite is true for human discrimination of elementary image elements: vision becomes sharper, not broader, as contrast approaches threshold levels. Furthermore, it suffers from increased internal variability at low contrast and it transitions from a surprisingly linear regime at high contrast to a markedly nonlinear processing mode in the low-contrast range. These characteristics are hard-wired in that they happen on a single trial without memory or expectation. Overall, the empirical results urge caution when attempting to interpret human vision from the standpoint of optimality and related theoretical constructs. Direct measurements of this phenomenon indicate that the actual constraints derive from intrinsic architectural features, such as the co-existence of complex-cell-like and simple-cell-like components. Small circuits built around these elements can indeed account for the empirical results, but do not appear to operate in a manner that conforms to optimality even approximately. More generally, our results provide a compelling demonstration of how far we still are from securing an adequate computational account of the most basic operations carried out by human vision.


Asunto(s)
Reconocimiento Visual de Modelos/fisiología , Visión Ocular/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Biología Computacional/métodos , Simulación por Computador , Humanos , Modelos Neurológicos , Neuronas/fisiología , Dinámicas no Lineales
8.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 12(7): e1005019, 2016 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27398600

RESUMEN

Sound waveforms convey information largely via amplitude modulations (AM). A large body of experimental evidence has provided support for a modulation (bandpass) filterbank. Details of this model have varied over time partly reflecting different experimental conditions and diverse datasets from distinct task strategies, contributing uncertainty to the bandwidth measurements and leaving important issues unresolved. We adopt here a solely data-driven measurement approach in which we first demonstrate how different models can be subsumed within a common 'cascade' framework, and then proceed to characterize the cascade via system identification analysis using a single stimulus/task specification and hence stable task rules largely unconstrained by any model or parameters. Observers were required to detect a brief change in level superimposed onto random level changes that served as AM noise; the relationship between trial-by-trial noisy fluctuations and corresponding human responses enables targeted identification of distinct cascade elements. The resulting measurements exhibit a dynamic complex picture in which human perception of auditory modulations appears adaptive in nature, evolving from an initial lowpass to bandpass modes (with broad tuning, Q∼1) following repeated stimulus exposure.


Asunto(s)
Vías Auditivas/fisiología , Percepción Auditiva/fisiología , Análisis y Desempeño de Tareas , Adulto , Biología Computacional , Humanos , Ruido , Adulto Joven
9.
J Neurosci ; 35(5): 1849-57, 2015 Feb 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25653346

RESUMEN

Autistic traits span a wide spectrum of behavioral departures from typical function. Despite the heterogeneous nature of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), there have been attempts at formulating unified theoretical accounts of the associated impairments in social cognition. A class of prominent theories capitalizes on the link between social interaction and visual perception: effective interaction with others often relies on discrimination of subtle nonverbal cues. It has been proposed that individuals with ASD may rely on poorer perceptual representations of other people's actions as returned by dysfunctional visual circuitry and that this, in turn, may lead to less effective interpretation of those actions for social behavior. It remains unclear whether such perceptual deficits exist in ASD: the evidence currently available is limited to specific aspects of action recognition, and the reported deficits are often attributable to cognitive factors that may not be strictly visual (e.g., attention). We present results from an exhaustive set of measurements spanning the entire action processing hierarchy, from motion detection to action interpretation, designed to factor out effects that are not selectively relevant to this function. Our results demonstrate that the ASD perceptual system returns functionally intact signals for interpreting other people's actions adequately; these signals can be accessed effectively when autistic individuals are prompted and motivated to do so under controlled conditions. However, they may fail to exploit them adequately during real-life social interactions.


Asunto(s)
Trastornos Generalizados del Desarrollo Infantil/fisiopatología , Percepción de Movimiento , Adolescente , Estudios de Casos y Controles , Cognición , Humanos , Masculino
10.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 11(11): e1004499, 2015 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26556758

RESUMEN

It is generally acknowledged that biological vision presents nonlinear characteristics, yet linear filtering accounts of visual processing are ubiquitous. The template-matching operation implemented by the linear-nonlinear cascade (linear filter followed by static nonlinearity) is the most widely adopted computational tool in systems neuroscience. This simple model achieves remarkable explanatory power while retaining analytical tractability, potentially extending its reach to a wide range of systems and levels in sensory processing. The extent of its applicability to human behaviour, however, remains unclear. Because sensory stimuli possess multiple attributes (e.g. position, orientation, size), the issue of applicability may be asked by considering each attribute one at a time in relation to a family of linear-nonlinear models, or by considering all attributes collectively in relation to a specified implementation of the linear-nonlinear cascade. We demonstrate that human visual processing can operate under conditions that are indistinguishable from linear-nonlinear transduction with respect to substantially different stimulus attributes of a uniquely specified target signal with associated behavioural task. However, no specific implementation of a linear-nonlinear cascade is able to account for the entire collection of results across attributes; a satisfactory account at this level requires the introduction of a small gain-control circuit, resulting in a model that no longer belongs to the linear-nonlinear family. Our results inform and constrain efforts at obtaining and interpreting comprehensive characterizations of the human sensory process by demonstrating its inescapably nonlinear nature, even under conditions that have been painstakingly fine-tuned to facilitate template-matching behaviour and to produce results that, at some level of inspection, do conform to linear filtering predictions. They also suggest that compliance with linear transduction may be the targeted outcome of carefully crafted nonlinear circuits, rather than default behaviour exhibited by basic components.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Neurológicos , Visión Ocular/fisiología , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Biología Computacional , Humanos , Dinámicas no Lineales
11.
J Neurosci ; 34(6): 2374-88, 2014 Feb 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24501376

RESUMEN

In the early stages of image analysis, visual cortex represents scenes as spatially organized maps of locally defined features (e.g., edge orientation). As image reconstruction unfolds and features are assembled into larger constructs, cortex attempts to recover semantic content for object recognition. It is conceivable that higher level representations may feed back onto early processes and retune their properties to align with the semantic structure projected by the scene; however, there is no clear evidence to either support or discard the applicability of this notion to the human visual system. Obtaining such evidence is challenging because low and higher level processes must be probed simultaneously within the same experimental paradigm. We developed a methodology that targets both levels of analysis by embedding low-level probes within natural scenes. Human observers were required to discriminate probe orientation while semantic interpretation of the scene was selectively disrupted via stimulus inversion or reversed playback. We characterized the orientation tuning properties of the perceptual process supporting probe discrimination; tuning was substantially reshaped by semantic manipulation, demonstrating that low-level feature detectors operate under partial control from higher level modules. The manner in which such control was exerted may be interpreted as a top-down predictive strategy whereby global semantic content guides and refines local image reconstruction. We exploit the novel information gained from data to develop mechanistic accounts of unexplained phenomena such as the classic face inversion effect.


Asunto(s)
Orientación/fisiología , Reconocimiento Visual de Modelos/fisiología , Estimulación Luminosa/métodos , Semántica , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Discriminación en Psicología/fisiología , Humanos , Percepción Visual/fisiología
12.
J Neurosci ; 34(25): 8449-61, 2014 Jun 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24948800

RESUMEN

Motion detection is a fundamental property of the visual system. The gold standard for studying and understanding this function is the motion energy model. This computational tool relies on spatiotemporally selective filters that capture the change in spatial position over time afforded by moving objects. Although the filters are defined in space-time, their human counterparts have never been studied in their native spatiotemporal space but rather in the corresponding frequency domain. When this frequency description is back-projected to spatiotemporal description, not all characteristics of the underlying process are retained, leaving open the possibility that important properties of human motion detection may have remained unexplored. We derived descriptors of motion detectors in native space-time, and discovered a large unexpected dynamic structure involving a >2× change in detector amplitude over the first ∼100 ms. This property is not predicted by the energy model, generalizes across the visual field, and is robust to adaptation; however, it is silenced by surround inhibition and is contrast dependent. We account for all results by extending the motion energy model to incorporate a small network that supports feedforward spread of activation along the motion trajectory via a simple gain-control circuit.


Asunto(s)
Percepción de Movimiento/fisiología , Estimulación Luminosa/métodos , Desempeño Psicomotor/fisiología , Percepción Espacial/fisiología , Percepción del Tiempo/fisiología , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Factores de Tiempo
13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 108(26): 10726-31, 2011 Jun 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21670301

RESUMEN

Biological image processing has been hypothesized to adopt a coarse to fine strategy: the image is initially analyzed at a coarse spatial scale, and this analysis is then used to guide subsequent inspection at a finer scale. Neurons in visual cortex often display response characteristics that are consistent with this hypothesis for both monocular and binocular signals. Puzzlingly, measurements in human observers have failed to expose similar coarse to fine dynamics for human pattern vision, questioning the applicability of direct parallels between single neurons and perception. We performed a series of measurements using experimental protocols that were specifically designed to examine this question in more detail. We were able to confirm that, when the analysis is restricted to the linear properties of the perceptual process, no coarse to fine dynamics were evident in the data. However, when the analysis was extended to nonlinear descriptors, a clear coarse to fine structure emerged that consisted of two processes: an early nonlinear process operating on a coarse spatial scale followed by a linear process operating on a fine spatial scale. These results potentially serve to reduce the gap between the electrophysiological and behavioral findings.


Asunto(s)
Visión Binocular , Visión Monocular , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Humanos , Neuronas/fisiología , Corteza Visual/citología
14.
J Neurophysiol ; 107(5): 1260-74, 2012 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22131380

RESUMEN

Attention is known to affect the response properties of sensory neurons in visual cortex. These effects have been traditionally classified into two categories: 1) changes in the gain (overall amplitude) of the response; and 2) changes in the tuning (selectivity) of the response. We performed an extensive series of behavioral measurements using psychophysical reverse correlation to understand whether/how these neuronal changes are reflected at the level of our perceptual experience. This question has been addressed before, but by different laboratories using different attentional manipulations and stimuli/tasks that are not directly comparable, making it difficult to extract a comprehensive and coherent picture from existing literature. Our results demonstrate that the effect of attention on response gain (not necessarily associated with tuning change) is relatively aspecific: it occurred across all the conditions we tested, including attention directed to a feature orthogonal to the primary feature for the assigned task. Sensory tuning, however, was affected primarily by feature-based attention and only to a limited extent by spatially directed attention, in line with existing evidence from the electrophysiological and behavioral literature.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Estimulación Luminosa/métodos , Desempeño Psicomotor/fisiología , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Humanos
15.
Biol Cybern ; 106(8-9): 465-82, 2012 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22854977

RESUMEN

Single neurons in auditory cortex display highly selective spectrotemporal properties: their receptive fields modulate over small fractions of an octave and integrate across temporal windows of 100-200 ms. We investigated how these characteristics impact auditory behavior. Human observers were asked to detect a specific sound frequency masked by broadband noise; we adopted an experimental design which required the engagement of frequency-selective mechanisms to perform above chance. We then applied psychophysical reverse correlation to derive spectrotemporal perceptual filters for the assigned task. We were able to expose signatures of neuronal-like spectrotemporal tuning on a scale of 1/10 octave and 50-100 ms, but detailed modeling of our results showed that observers were not able to rely on the explicit output of these channels. Instead, human observers pooled from a large bank of highly selective channels via a weighting envelope poorly tuned for frequency (on a scale of 1.5 octave) with sluggish temporal dynamics, followed by a highly nonlinear max-like operation. We conclude that human detection of specific frequencies embedded within complex sounds suffers from a high degree of intrinsic spectrotemporal uncertainty, resulting in low efficiency values (<1 %) for this perceptual ability. Signatures of the underlying neural circuitry can be exposed, but there does not appear to be a direct line for accessing individual neural channels on a fine scale.


Asunto(s)
Vías Auditivas/fisiología , Modelos Neurológicos , Neuronas/fisiología , Percepción de la Altura Tonal/fisiología , Estimulación Acústica , Humanos
16.
Neural Netw ; 152: 244-266, 2022 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35567948

RESUMEN

We assess whether deep convolutional networks (DCN) can account for a most fundamental property of human vision: detection/discrimination of elementary image elements (bars) at different contrast levels. The human visual process can be characterized to varying degrees of "depth," ranging from percentage of correct detection to detailed tuning and operating characteristics of the underlying perceptual mechanism. We challenge deep networks with the same stimuli/tasks used with human observers and apply equivalent characterization of the stimulus-response coupling. In general, we find that popular DCN architectures do not account for signature properties of the human process. For shallow depth of characterization, some variants of network-architecture/training-protocol produce human-like trends; however, more articulate empirical descriptors expose glaring discrepancies. Networks can be coaxed into learning those richer descriptors by shadowing a human surrogate in the form of a tailored circuit perturbed by unstructured input, thus ruling out the possibility that human-model misalignment in standard protocols may be attributable to insufficient representational power. These results urge caution in assessing whether neural networks do or do not capture human behavior: ultimately, our ability to assess "success" in this area can only be as good as afforded by the depth of behavioral characterization against which the network is evaluated. We propose a novel set of metrics/protocols that impose stringent constraints on the evaluation of DCN behavior as an adequate approximation to biological processes.


Asunto(s)
Aprendizaje , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Humanos
17.
Trends Hear ; 25: 2331216520978029, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33620023

RESUMEN

Spectrotemporal modulations (STM) are essential features of speech signals that make them intelligible. While their encoding has been widely investigated in neurophysiology, we still lack a full understanding of how STMs are processed at the behavioral level and how cochlear hearing loss impacts this processing. Here, we introduce a novel methodological framework based on psychophysical reverse correlation deployed in the modulation space to characterize the mechanisms underlying STM detection in noise. We derive perceptual filters for young normal-hearing and older hearing-impaired individuals performing a detection task of an elementary target STM (a given product of temporal and spectral modulations) embedded in other masking STMs. Analyzed with computational tools, our data show that both groups rely on a comparable linear (band-pass)-nonlinear processing cascade, which can be well accounted for by a temporal modulation filter bank model combined with cross-correlation against the target representation. Our results also suggest that the modulation mistuning observed for the hearing-impaired group results primarily from broader cochlear filters. Yet, we find idiosyncratic behaviors that cannot be captured by cochlear tuning alone, highlighting the need to consider variability originating from additional mechanisms. Overall, this integrated experimental-computational approach offers a principled way to assess suprathreshold processing distortions in each individual and could thus be used to further investigate interindividual differences in speech intelligibility.


Asunto(s)
Pérdida Auditiva Sensorineural , Percepción del Habla , Umbral Auditivo , Audición , Pérdida Auditiva Sensorineural/diagnóstico , Humanos , Ruido/efectos adversos , Enmascaramiento Perceptual
18.
Chaos ; 20(4): 045118, 2010 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21198130

RESUMEN

Human sensory processing can be viewed as a functional H mapping a stimulus vector s into a decisional variable r. We currently have no direct access to r; rather, the human makes a decision based on r in order to drive subsequent behavior. It is this (typically binary) decision that we can measure. For example, there may be two external stimuli s([0]) and s([1]), mapped onto r([0]) and r([1]) by the sensory apparatus H; the human chooses the stimulus associated with largest r. This kind of decisional transduction poses a major challenge for an accurate characterization of H. In this article, we explore a specific approach based on a behavioral variant of reverse correlation techniques, where the input s contains a target signal corrupted by a controlled noisy perturbation. The presence of the target signal poses an additional challenge because it distorts the otherwise unbiased nature of the noise source. We consider issues arising from both the decisional transducer and the target signal, their impact on system identification, and ways to handle them effectively for system characterizations that extend to second-order functional approximations with associated small-scale cascade models.


Asunto(s)
Algoritmos , Percepción/fisiología , Sensación/fisiología , Animales , Simulación por Computador , Humanos , Cinética , Modelos Lineales , Modelos Biológicos , Dinámicas no Lineales , Procesos Estocásticos
19.
Nat Neurosci ; 9(9): 1186-92, 2006 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16936721

RESUMEN

The ability to interpret and predict other people's actions is highly evolved in humans and is believed to play a central role in their cognitive behavior. However, there is no direct evidence that this ability confers a tangible benefit to sensory processing. Our quantitative behavioral experiments show that visual discrimination of a human agent is influenced by the presence of a second agent. This effect depended on whether the two agents interacted (by fighting or dancing) in a meaningful synchronized fashion that allowed the actions of one agent to serve as predictors for the expected actions of the other agent, even though synchronization was irrelevant to the visual discrimination task. Our results demonstrate that action understanding has a pervasive impact on the human ability to extract visual information from the actions of other humans, providing quantitative evidence of its significance for sensory performance.


Asunto(s)
Discriminación en Psicología , Percepción de Movimiento/fisiología , Reconocimiento Visual de Modelos/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Cognición/fisiología , Señales (Psicología) , Humanos , Modelos Psicológicos , Tiempo de Reacción , Corteza Visual/fisiología
20.
J Neurophysiol ; 102(5): 2594-602, 2009 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19726727

RESUMEN

The response of motion-sensitive neurons to stimuli presented within their receptive field is often affected by stimulation in the surrounding region. These effects have perceptually relevant consequences that can be measured using behavioral techniques. We used psychophysical reverse correlation to characterize directional selectivity in human observers while they processed a local motion stimulus and studied the effect of adding an additional motion signal in the surrounding region. The surround had no effect on response gain for signals of opposite direction but selectively reduced gain for those of same direction. Surprisingly this reduction was close to 100%, effectively amounting to a gating process whereby signals of same direction were completely silenced. Our data indicate that by far the most prominent perceptual manifestation of center-surround antagonism is gain suppression by motion in the same direction without any appreciable change in directional tuning.


Asunto(s)
Percepción de Movimiento/fisiología , Orientación/fisiología , Percepción Espacial/fisiología , Campos Visuales/fisiología , Conducta de Elección/fisiología , Sensibilidad de Contraste/fisiología , Humanos , Inhibición Psicológica , Modelos Neurológicos , Pruebas Neuropsicológicas , Estimulación Luminosa/métodos , Psicofísica , Factores de Tiempo , Vías Visuales/fisiología
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