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Published byAngel McDowell Modified over 9 years ago
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ACTIVE SENSING Lecture 1: The Senses
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The senses:
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Sensing:
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Sensory encoding: Sensory organs consist of receptor arrays: audition 10 m cochlea vision retina 10 m somatosensation Finger pad ~200 m What receptors tell the brain
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Sensory encoding: Sensory organs consist of receptor arrays: audition 10 m cochlea vision retina 10 m somatosensation Finger pad ~200 m Spatial organization => Spatial coding (“which receptors are activated”) What receptors tell the brain
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Spatial coding (via passive sensing) would be sufficient had the world being continuously flashing on us and sensory sheets were u n i f o r m
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Passive sensing metaphors the eye as a camera the skin as a carbon paper one could think of: Imprinted on the skin via mechano-receptors Imprinted on paper via carbon particles Pressure is light is Imprinted on the retina via photo-receptors
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However 1. The world is not flashing and receptors are mostly sensitive to changes Receptors must move
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Active Sensing: Sensor organs MOVE in order to obtain information
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Active Sensing: Sensor organs MOVE in order to obtain information
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However 1. The world is not flashing 2. sensory sheets are not uniform
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finger Fovea eye Fovea => macro movements of the sensory organ whisker
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Sensor motion is required for Foveation Sensing stationary environment Without sensor motion sensation is limited to moving or flashing objects
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How sensor motion constrains sensory coding?
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Eye movements during fixation backward!
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Eye movements during fixation
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=> Temporal coding (“when are receptors activated”) Sensory organs consist of receptor arrays: audition 10 m cochlea vision retina 10 m somatosensation Finger pad ~200 m Spatial organization => Spatial coding (“which receptors are activated”) Movements sensory encoding: What receptors tell the brain
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Some similarities between vision and touch sensation
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whisker Meissner (RAI) Merkel (SAI) Ruffini (SAII) Lanceolate (RAx) free endings Finger pad SAI SAII RAI RAII eye R G B Receptor types SA RA PC Some similarities between vision and touch sensation
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eye finger whisker 5’ @ 1 o Receptors mix Some similarities between vision and touch sensation
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Receptor filtering SA RA PC Frequency (Hz) Touch R G B Frequency (10 13 Hz) Vision 1101001000 Some similarities between vision and touch sensation
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Receptor convergence / divergence Human eye: 5M cones + 120M rods --> 1M fibers Human skin: 2,500 receptors/cm 2 --> 300 fibers / cm 2 Rat whisker: 2,000 receptors --> 300 fibers Human ear: 3,000 hair cells --> 30,000 fibers Some similarities between vision and touch sensation
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eye finger whisker Receptors Bipolar cells Ganglion cells Thalamus Cortex Receptors Ganglion cells Brainstem cells Thalamus Cortex Processing stations Some similarities between vision and touch sensation
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eye finger whisker Receptors Bipolar cells Ganglion cells Receptors Ganglion cells Brainstem cells Lateral inhibition Some similarities between vision and touch sensation
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Spatial Encoding vision retina 10 m retina – 2D matrix of photorecetors sensitive to light changes finger tip – 2D array of mechanoreceptors sensitive to skin movement somatosensation Finger pad ~10 mm Some similarities between vision and touch sensation Whisker pad – 2D array of hairs sensitive to movement
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whiskers – 2D array of whiskers Spatial Encoding but... Some similarities between vision and touch sensation
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Analogies Fovea: retinal fovea - finger pad - whisker pad Some similarities between vision and touch sensation Sensor motion: an eye - a finger - a whisker
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