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1.
Eur J Neurosci ; 26(4): 1045-54, 2007 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17714195

RESUMO

In normal vision, visual scenes are predictable, as they are both spatially and temporally redundant. Evidence suggests that the visual system may use the spatio-temporal regularities of the external world, available in the retinal signal, to extract information from the visual environment and better reconstruct current and future stimuli. We studied this by recording neuronal responses of primary visual cortex (area V1) in anaesthetized and paralysed macaques during the presentation of dynamic sequences of bars, in which spatio-temporal regularities and local information were independently manipulated. Most V1 neurons were significantly modulated by events prior to and distant from stimulation of their classical receptive fields (CRFs); many were more strongly tuned to prior and distant events than they were to CRFs bars; and several showed tuning to prior information without any CRF stimulation. Hence, V1 neurons do not simply analyse local contours, but impute local features to the visual world, on the basis of prior knowledge of a visual world in which useful information can be distributed widely in space and time.


Assuntos
Neurônios/fisiologia , Percepção Espacial/fisiologia , Percepção do Tempo/fisiologia , Córtex Visual/fisiologia , Algoritmos , Anestesia , Animais , Mapeamento Encefálico , Interpretação Estatística de Dados , Eletrodos Implantados , Espaço Extracelular/fisiologia , Macaca mulatta , Microeletrodos , Percepção de Movimento/fisiologia , Orientação/fisiologia , Estimulação Luminosa , Córtex Visual/citologia , Campos Visuais/fisiologia
2.
Vision Res ; 44(20): 2349-58, 2004.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15246751

RESUMO

Spatial and temporal regularities commonly exist in natural visual scenes. The knowledge of the probability structure of these regularities is likely to be informative for an efficient visual system. Here we explored how manipulating the spatio-temporal prior probability of stimuli affects human orientation perception. Stimulus sequences comprised four collinear bars (predictors) which appeared successively towards the foveal region, followed by a target bar with the same or different orientation. Subjects' orientation perception of the foveal target was biased towards the orientation of the predictors when presented in a highly ordered and predictable sequence. The discrimination thresholds were significantly elevated in proportion to increasing prior probabilities of the predictors. Breaking this sequence, by randomising presentation order or presentation duration, decreased the thresholds. These psychophysical observations are consistent with a Bayesian model, suggesting that a predictable spatio-temporal stimulus structure and an increased probability of collinear trials are associated with the increasing prior expectation of collinear events. Our results suggest that statistical spatio-temporal stimulus regularities are effectively integrated by human visual cortex over a range of spatial and temporal positions, thereby systematically affecting perception.


Assuntos
Orientação/fisiologia , Percepção Espacial/fisiologia , Percepção do Tempo/fisiologia , Teorema de Bayes , Discriminação Psicológica/fisiologia , Humanos , Modelos Psicológicos , Estimulação Luminosa/métodos , Psicofísica
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