We are on track for an exam on NOVEMBER 2 nd To cover everything since last exam up to Friday the 28th.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Read this article for Friday next week [1]Chelazzi L, Miller EK, Duncan J, Desimone R. A neural basis for visual search in inferior temporal cortex. Nature.
Advertisements

Midterm 1 Oct. 21 in class. Read this article by Wednesday next week!
Electrophysiology of Visual Attention. Does Visual Attention Modulate Visual Evoked Potentials? The theory is that Visual Attention modulates visual information.
Chapter 3: Neural Processing and Perception. Lateral Inhibition and Perception Experiments with eye of Limulus –Ommatidia allow recordings from a single.
The Physiology of Attention. Physiology of Attention Neural systems involved in orienting Neural correlates of selection.
Sensory memory, Primary memory. Today Sensory memory and its characteristics Working memory--a specific model of primary memory.
Visual Attention Attention is the ability to select objects of interest from the surrounding environment A reliable measure of attention is eye movement.
Human (ERP and imaging) and monkey (cell recording) data together 1. Modality specific extrastriate cortex is modulated by attention (V4, IT, MT). 2. V1.
Chapter 6: Visual Attention. Overview of Questions Why do we pay attention to some parts of a scene but not to others? Do we have to pay attention to.
Midterm 1 Oct. 6 in class Review Session after class on Monday – Location TBA.
Read this article for Friday next week [1]Chelazzi L, Miller EK, Duncan J, Desimone R. A neural basis for visual search in inferior temporal cortex. Nature.
Neural Correlates of Visual Awareness. A Hard Problem Are all organisms conscious?
NEUR 3680 Midterm II Review Megan Metzler
Attention I Attention Wolfe et al Ch 7. Dana said that most vision is agenda-driven. He introduced the slide where the people attended to the many weird.
Dissociable neural mechanisms supporting visual short-term memory for objects Xu, Y. & Chun, M. M. (2006) Nature, 440,
Covert Attention Mariel Velez What is attention? Attention is the ability to select objects of interest from the surrounding environment Involuntary.
Neural Correlates of Visual Awareness. A Hard Problem Are all organisms conscious?
Lesions of Retinostriate Pathway Lesions (usually due to stroke) cause a region of blindness called a scotoma Identified using perimetry note macular sparing.
Test on Friday!. Lesions of Retinostriate Pathway Lesions (usually due to stroke) cause a region of blindness called a scotoma Identified using perimetry.
Read this article for Friday Oct 21! Trends in Neuroscience (2000) 23, Hint #1: there are at least 3 ways of getting this article Hint #2: none.
Visual Neuron Responses This conceptualization of the visual system was “static” - it did not take into account the possibility that visual cells might.
Test Oct. 21 Review Session Oct 19 2pm in TH201 (that’s here)
Read this paper Chellazi et al. (1993) Nature 363 Pg
Visual Search: finding a single item in a cluttered visual scene.
Electrophysiology of Visual Attention. Moran and Desimone (1985) “Classical” RF prediction: there should be no difference in responses in these two conditions.
Visual Pathways W. W. Norton Primary cortex maintains distinct pathways – functional segregation M and P pathways synapse in different layers Ascending.
Test Oct. 21 Review Session Oct 19 2pm in TH201 (that’s here)
Use a pen on the test. The distinct modes of vision offered by feedforward and recurrent processing Victor A.F. Lamme and Pieter R. Roelfsema.
Writing Workshop Find the relevant literature –Use the review journals as a first approach e.g. Nature Reviews Neuroscience Trends in Neuroscience Trends.
Cognitive Operations What does the brain actually do? Some possible answers: –“The mind” –Information processing… –Transforms of mental representations.
Read this article for Friday next week [1]Chelazzi L, Miller EK, Duncan J, Desimone R. A neural basis for visual search in inferior temporal cortex. Nature.
MENTAL REPRESENATIONS Neur 3680 Midterm I review.
Searching for the NCC We can measure all sorts of neural correlates of these processes…so we can see the neural correlates of consciousness right? So what’s.
Midterm 1 Wednesday next week!. Your Research Proposal Project A research proposal attempts to persuade the reader that: – The underlying question is.
Question Examples If you were a neurosurgeon and you needed to take out part of the cortex of a patient, which technique would you use to identify the.
Your Test to go over your test in See me if you have to complain about something.
Some concepts from Cognitive Psychology to review: Shadowing Visual Search Cue-target Paradigm Hint: you’ll find these in Chapter 12.
The Opposite of Attention is Epilepsy: Six ways of thinking about attention and why you should.
Read this article for Friday [1]Chelazzi L, Miller EK, Duncan J, Desimone R. A neural basis for visual search in inferior temporal cortex. Nature 1993;
Read this article for Friday Oct 21! Trends in Neuroscience (2000) 23, Hint #1: there are at least 3 ways of getting this article Hint #2: none.
Post-test review session Tuesday Nov in TH241.
Attention as Information Selection. Early Selection Early Selection model postulated that attention acted as a strict gate at the lowest levels of sensory.
How does the visual system represent visual information? How does the visual system represent features of scenes? Vision is analytical - the system breaks.
Read this article for Friday [1]Chelazzi L, Miller EK, Duncan J, Desimone R. A neural basis for visual search in inferior temporal cortex. Nature 1993;
Business Minor grade adjustments on Midterm 2 Opportunity to participate in Cognitive Neuroscience and Perception experiment - sign up for Tuesday, Wednesday.
Disorders of Orienting Lesions to parietal cortex can produce some strange behavioural consequences –patients fail to notice events on the contralesional.
December 1, 2009Introduction to Cognitive Science Lecture 22: Neural Models of Mental Processes 1 Some YouTube movies: The Neocognitron Part I:
A.F. Lamme and Pieter R. Roelfsema
Learning Sensorimotor Contingencies James J. Clark Centre for Intelligent Machines McGill University.
Ch 31 Sensation & Perception Ch. 3: Vision © Takashi Yamauchi (Dept. of Psychology, Texas A&M University) Main topics –convergence –Inhibition, lateral.
Connected Populations: oscillations, competition and spatial continuum (field equations) Lecture 12 Course: Neural Networks and Biological Modeling Wulfram.
Consequences of Attentional Selection Single unit recordings.
University Studies 15A: Consciousness I The Neurobiology of Vision.
THE VISUAL SYSTEM: EYE TO CORTEX Outline 1. The Eyes a. Structure b. Accommodation c. Binocular Disparity 2. The Retina a. Structure b. Completion c. Cone.
The primate visual systemHelmuth Radrich, The primate visual system 1.Structure of the eye 2.Neural responses to light 3.Brightness perception.
Chapter 8: Perceiving Motion
Neuronal Adaptation to Visual Motion in Area MT of the Macaque -Kohn & Movshon 지각 심리 전공 박정애.
Chapter 3: Neural Processing and Perception. Neural Processing and Perception Neural processing is the interaction of signals in many neurons.
The Function of Synchrony Marieke Rohde Reading Group DyStURB (Dynamical Structures to Understand Real Brains)
Binding problems and feature integration theory. Feature detectors Neurons that fire to specific features of a stimulus Pathway away from retina shows.
Midterm 1 Oct. 6 in class Review Session after class on Monday.
Ko Youngkil.  Biological Evidence  5 prediction  compare with experimental results  Primary visual cortex (V1) is involved in image segmentation,
Ahissar, Hochstein (1997) Nature Task difficulty and specificity of perceptual learning 1 st third 2nd third Final session Task difficulty Stimulus-to-mask.
Cogs1 mapping space in the brain Douglas Nitz – Feb. 19, 2009 any point in space is defined relative to other points in space.
Basics of Computational Neuroscience. What is computational neuroscience ? The Interdisciplinary Nature of Computational Neuroscience.
9.012 Presentation by Alex Rakhlin March 16, 2001
Brain States: Top-Down Influences in Sensory Processing
Volume 75, Issue 1, Pages (July 2012)
Brain States: Top-Down Influences in Sensory Processing
Learning Sensorimotor Contingencies
Presentation transcript:

We are on track for an exam on NOVEMBER 2 nd To cover everything since last exam up to Friday the 28th

What can a visual neuron “know” about the image? If a neuron is only an edge detector and/or only has a small receptive field, it can’t represent information about the relationship between the contents of its receptive field and other receptive fields elsewhere in the display. Also the 2004 Harvard – Yale Game:

Visual Neuron Responses Boundaries between objects can be defined by texture

The Feed-Forward Sweep Hierarchy can be defined more functionaly The feed-forward sweep is the initial response of each visual area “in turn” as information is passed to it from a “lower” area Consider the latencies of the first responses in various areas

Extra-RF Influences One thing they seem to be doing is helping each other figure out what aspects of the entire scene are contained within a given receptive field –That is, the responses of visual neurons begin to change to reflect global rather than local features of the scene –recurrent signals sent via feedback projections are thought to mediate these later properties

Extra-RF Influences Note that these are responses to the same stimulus!

Extra-RF Influences consider texture-defined boundaries –classical RF tuning properties do not allow neuron to know if RF contains figure or background –At progressively later latencies, the neuron responds differently depending on whether it is encoding boundaries, surfaces, the background, etc.

Extra-RF Influences Consider this analogy: –Imagine when each fan puts up a card he or she is told to shake it – so that the entire scene is full of shaking cards –After some delay, the fans holding up the cards that make up the word are told to keep shaking but the fans holding background cards are told to stop…the words will be enhanced –But the fans can’t each figure that out on their own because they don’t actually know how their one card relates to the rest of the scene

Extra-RF Influences How do these data contradict the notion of a “classical” receptive field?

Extra-RF Influences How do these data contradict the notion of a “classical” receptive field? Remember that for a classical receptive field (i.e. feature detector): –If the neuron’s preferred stimulus is present in the receptive field, the neuron should fire a stereotypical burst of APs –If the neuron is firing a burst of APs, its preferred stimulus must be present in the receptive field

Extra-RF Influences How do these data contradict the notion of a “classical” receptive field? Remember that for a classical receptive field (i.e. feature detector): –If the neuron’s preferred stimulus is present in the receptive field, the neuron should fire a stereotypical burst of APs –If the neuron is firing a burst of APs, its preferred stimulus must be present in the receptive field

Recurrent Signals in Object Perception Can a neuron represent whether or not its receptive field is on part of an attended object? What if attention is initially directed to a different part of the object?

Recurrent Signals in Object Perception Can a neuron represent whether or not its receptive field is on part of an attended object? What if attention is initially directed to a different part of the object? Yes, but not during the feed-forward sweep

Recurrent Signals in Object Perception curve tracing –monkey indicates whether a particular segment is on a particular curve –requires attention to scan the curve and “select” all segments that belong together –that is: make a representation of the entire curve –takes time

Recurrent Signals in Object Perception curve tracing –neuron begins to respond differently at about 200 ms –enhanced firing rate if neuron is on the attended curve

Feedback Signals and the binding problem What is the binding problem?

Feedback Signals and the binding problem What is the binding problem? curve tracing and the binding problem: –if all neurons with RFs over the attended curve spike faster/at a specific frequency/in synchrony, this might be the binding signal

Feedback Signals and the binding problem So what’s the connection between Attention and Recurrent Signals?

Feedback Signals and Attention One theory is that attention (attentive processing) entails the establishing of recurrent “loops” This explains why attentive processing takes time - feed-forward sweep is insufficient

Feedback Signals and Attention Instruction cues (for example in the Posner Cue- Target paradigm) may cause feedback signal prior to stimulus onset (thus prior to feed-forward sweep) think of this as pre-setting the system for the upcoming stimulus What does this accomplish?

Feedback Signals and Attention What does this accomplish? Preface to attention: Two ways to think about attention –Attention improves perception, acts as a gateway to memory and consciousness –Attention is a mechanism that routes information through the brain It is the brain actively reconfiguring itself by changing the way signals propagate through networks It is a form of very fast, very transient plasticity

Feedback Signals and Attention Put another way: –It may strike you as remarkable that a single visual stimulus should “activate” so many brain areas so rapidly –In fact it should be puzzling that a visual input doesn’t create a runaway “chain reaction” The brain is massively interconnected Why shouldn’t every neuron respond to a visual stimulus

Feedback Signals and Attention We’ll consider the role of feedback signals in attention in more detail as we discuss the neuroscience of attention