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Visual Learning, Pattern and Form Perception: Central Mechanisms

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Sensory System I

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Abstract

It seems clear that our progress in understanding the neural subsystems underlying form and pattern vision will depend to a large extent on precise formulations of the manner in which forms and patterns are perceived in the first place. Over the last 20 years, two different modes of image processing have received the most attention. The first approach is known as hierarchical feature processing. According to this view, the visual system analyzes images by detecting the presence of local features (e.g., edges, line segments, and corners). Recognition then depends on the assimilation of these features into higher order groups that represent the boundaries of objects present in the scene. Interpretations of stimulus-induced activity of cortical cells in terms of feature detectors is consistent with this view, although it is generally recognized that individual cortical cells do not behave as true feature detectors (since, for example, there is a trade-off between orientation and contrast such that an optimally oriented bar of low contrast can produce the same response as a higher contrast bar in a different orientation). In any case, the notion of hierarchical feature detection logically leads to the idea that complicated percepts are encoded by individual neurons located at a “high level” in the visual system. Despite some evidence for such neurons in the inferotemporal cortex of monkeys, this approach is generally regarded as too cumbersome to provide the neural substrate of pattern and form vision in general, although this might be the way in which images of particular ecological relevance to an animal might be encoded.

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Further reading

Cats

  • Berkley MA, Sprague JM (1979): Striate cortex and visual acuity functions in the cat. J Comp Neurol 187: 679–702

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  • Sherman SM (1986): Functional Organization of the w-, x-, and y-cell pathways in the cat: A review and hypothesis. In: Progress in Psychobiology and Physiological Psychology, vol 11, Sprague JM, Epstein AN, eds. New York: Academic Press

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  • Sprague JM, Hughes HC, Berlucchi G (1981): Cortical Mechanisms in Pattern and Form Perception. In: Brain Mechanisms and Perceptual Awareness, Pompeiano O, Ajmone Marsan C, eds. New York: Raven Press

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Monkeys

  • Pasik P, Pasik T (1982): Visual functions in monkeys after total removal of the visual cerebral cortex. In: Contributions to Sensory Physiology, Neff WD, ed. New York: Academic Press

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Humans

  • Campion L, Latto R, Smith M (1983): Is blindsight an effect of scattered light, spared cortex, and near threshold vision? Behav Brain Sei 6: 423–486

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  • Weiskrantz L (1980): Varieties of residual experience. Q J Exp Psy~ chol 32: 365–386

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© 1988 Springer Science+Business Media New York

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Hughes, H.C., Sprague, J.M. (1988). Visual Learning, Pattern and Form Perception: Central Mechanisms. In: Sensory System I. Readings from the Encyclopedia of Neuroscience . Birkhäuser, Boston, MA. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-6647-6_41

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-6647-6_41

  • Publisher Name: Birkhäuser, Boston, MA

  • Print ISBN: 978-1-4899-6649-0

  • Online ISBN: 978-1-4899-6647-6

  • eBook Packages: Springer Book Archive

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