* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Slides from Discussion section VI 11/15/2004 (Elissa
Affective neuroscience wikipedia , lookup
Cortical cooling wikipedia , lookup
Environmental enrichment wikipedia , lookup
Activity-dependent plasticity wikipedia , lookup
Response priming wikipedia , lookup
Neuroeconomics wikipedia , lookup
Development of the nervous system wikipedia , lookup
Emotion and memory wikipedia , lookup
Neural oscillation wikipedia , lookup
Neuroethology wikipedia , lookup
Convolutional neural network wikipedia , lookup
Visual search wikipedia , lookup
Visual selective attention in dementia wikipedia , lookup
Central pattern generator wikipedia , lookup
Perception of infrasound wikipedia , lookup
Mirror neuron wikipedia , lookup
Caridoid escape reaction wikipedia , lookup
Emotion perception wikipedia , lookup
Surface wave detection by animals wikipedia , lookup
Neuroanatomy wikipedia , lookup
Nervous system network models wikipedia , lookup
Emotional lateralization wikipedia , lookup
Metastability in the brain wikipedia , lookup
Clinical neurochemistry wikipedia , lookup
Neuropsychopharmacology wikipedia , lookup
Pre-Bötzinger complex wikipedia , lookup
Visual servoing wikipedia , lookup
Neuroesthetics wikipedia , lookup
Visual extinction wikipedia , lookup
Optogenetics wikipedia , lookup
Premovement neuronal activity wikipedia , lookup
Synaptic gating wikipedia , lookup
Binding problem wikipedia , lookup
Neural correlates of consciousness wikipedia , lookup
Psychophysics wikipedia , lookup
Channelrhodopsin wikipedia , lookup
Neural coding wikipedia , lookup
C1 and P1 (neuroscience) wikipedia , lookup
Stimulus (physiology) wikipedia , lookup
Time perception wikipedia , lookup
Visual categorization shapes feature selectivity in the primate temporal cortex Natasha Sigala & Nikos K. Logothetis In: Nature, vol 415, 17 Jan 2002 Questions: Generally: How do we categorize objects? What does the Inferior Temporal (IT) cortex do? Which object features are represented in neurons in the inferior temporal cortex of the macaque? How are these representations affected by categorization training? Specifically: Do Inferior Temporal neurons fire differentially in response to object features that are experimentally deemed to be significant for success on a categorization task? Alternatives: Neurons in the IT cortex will differentially respond to specific features after categorization training Neurons in the IT cortex will not differentially fire in response to specific features after categorization training Logic: Experience effects our perception of a given object Neurons in IT are known to be part of the ventral stream-- “what” processing system If experience effects the way we perceive objects, neuronal firing will show it—that is, experience of attention to specific features will change the firing patterns for objects that we see subsequently Methods: Two [happy] macaque monkeys Stimuli: “parameterized” line drawings of faces and fish (stimuli had measurable features) Diagnostic and non-diagnostic features Training Testing Methods: Stimuli Faces: – – – – EH, eye height ES, eye separation NL, nose length MH, mouth height EH, ES—separable; diagnostic NL, MH not separable; non-diagnostic Methods: Stimuli Fish – – – – DF, shape of dorsal fin T, tail VF, ventral fins M, mouth DF, T separable; diagnostic VF, M not separable; non-diagnostic Stimuli Methods Categorization task Monkeys trained to pull a different lever depending on if are shown stimulus from category 1 or 2 – – Trained until they reached 98% accuracy in about ½ second (416 ms, 530ms) Tested—34 face, 34 fish, 10 repetitions Methods Recorded from 150 single neurons from anterior IT—in different experimental sessions Of these 150, 96 responded to visual stimuli – – 96 tested with faces stimuli 65 tested with fish stimuli Results: 44 of 96 (45.8%) neurons responded statistically significantly to one or more values of the face stimuli features – 32 of these 44 (72.7%) responded selectively to either one or both diagnostic features of the face stimuli (but did not respond for the non-diagnostic features) Results 28 of 65 (43.1%) neurons responded statistically significantly to one or more values of the fish stimuli features – 21 of these 28 (75%) responded selectively to either one or both diagnostic features of the fish stimuli (and not for the non-diagnostic features.) Results: Definitions There were three possible values for each stimulus feature (eg: large, medium or small eye width) Best feature, defined as the stimulus value that provoked the largest number of spikes per second Worst feature, defined as the stimulus value that provoked the least number of spikes per second Results: Figure 4 For both faces and fish, more neurons fired in response to the diagnostic features Red: neurons that fired statistically significantly selectively for diagnostic features only Blue: neurons that fired statistically significantly selectively for diagnostic and non-diagnostic features Black: no significant selectivity Interpretation: This study supports the notion that perception of visual category information is processed in the Inferior Temporal cortex Inferior Temporal neurons do fire differentially in response to object features that are experimentally deemed to be significant for success on a categorization task. Limitations: Before and After snapshot missing: It would have been an even more exciting study if the authors had shown the patterns of neuronal firing before the training and compared that to posttraining firing rates – Or alternatively, they could have trained other monkeys on the “non-diagnostic” features in order to provide more evidence that it was actually the training that caused the selective firing Having shown such an interesting result, it would have been even more theoretically important if they had correlated the monkeys’ category discriminations (behavior) with the patterns of neuronal firing. According to visual system expert (Pascal) the stimuli were a bit small for the monkeys to see