Neural mechanisms underlying invariant behaviour such as object recognition are not well understood. For brain regions critical for object recognition, such as inferior temporal cortex (ITC), there is now ample evidence indicating that single cells code for many stimulus aspects, implying that only a moderate degree of invariance is present. However, recent theoretical and empirical work seems to suggest that integrating responses of multiple non-invariant units may produce invariant representations at population level. We provide an explicit test for the hypothesis that a linear read-out mechanism of a pool of units resembling ITC neurons may achieve invariant performance in an identification task. A linear classifier was trained to decode...
Mounting evidence suggests that 'core object recognition,' the ability to rapidly recognize objects ...
Understanding the brain computations leading to object recognition requires quantitative characteriz...
ent regions of IT while monkeys were performing a face discrimination task. The underlying assumptio...
Visual object recognition is remarkably accurate and robust, yet its neurophysiological underpinning...
Primates can easily identify visual objects over large changes in retinal position--a property commo...
Recent advances in Computer Vision and Experimental Neuroscience provided insights into mechanisms u...
Abstract Coding for visual stimuli in the ventral stream is known to be invariant to ...
Understanding the complex brain computations leading to object recognition requires quantitatively c...
Understanding the complex brain computations leading to object recognition requires quantitatively c...
Anterior inferotemporal cortex (ITa) plays a key role in visual object recognition. Recognition is t...
To go beyond qualitative models of the biological substrate of object recognition, we ask: can a sin...
Mounting evidence suggests that ‘core object recognition,’ the ability to rapidly recognize objects ...
http://jn.physiology.org/content/102/1/360.abstractPrimates can easily identify visual objects over ...
Invariant visual object recognition and the underlying neural representations are fundamental to hig...
SummaryWe easily recognize objects and faces across a myriad of retinal images produced by each obje...
Mounting evidence suggests that 'core object recognition,' the ability to rapidly recognize objects ...
Understanding the brain computations leading to object recognition requires quantitative characteriz...
ent regions of IT while monkeys were performing a face discrimination task. The underlying assumptio...
Visual object recognition is remarkably accurate and robust, yet its neurophysiological underpinning...
Primates can easily identify visual objects over large changes in retinal position--a property commo...
Recent advances in Computer Vision and Experimental Neuroscience provided insights into mechanisms u...
Abstract Coding for visual stimuli in the ventral stream is known to be invariant to ...
Understanding the complex brain computations leading to object recognition requires quantitatively c...
Understanding the complex brain computations leading to object recognition requires quantitatively c...
Anterior inferotemporal cortex (ITa) plays a key role in visual object recognition. Recognition is t...
To go beyond qualitative models of the biological substrate of object recognition, we ask: can a sin...
Mounting evidence suggests that ‘core object recognition,’ the ability to rapidly recognize objects ...
http://jn.physiology.org/content/102/1/360.abstractPrimates can easily identify visual objects over ...
Invariant visual object recognition and the underlying neural representations are fundamental to hig...
SummaryWe easily recognize objects and faces across a myriad of retinal images produced by each obje...
Mounting evidence suggests that 'core object recognition,' the ability to rapidly recognize objects ...
Understanding the brain computations leading to object recognition requires quantitative characteriz...
ent regions of IT while monkeys were performing a face discrimination task. The underlying assumptio...