Humans make about 3 saccades per second at the eyeball's speed of 700 deg/sec to reposition the high-acuity fovea on the targets of interest to build up understanding of a scene. The brain's visuosaccadic circuitry uses the oculomotor command of each impending saccade to shift receptive fields (RFs) to cortical locations before the eyes take them there, giving a continuous and stable view of the world. We have developed a model for image representation based on projective Fourier transform (PFT) intended for robotic vision, which may efficiently process visual information during the motion of a camera with silicon retina that resembles saccadic eye movements. Here, the related neuroscience background is presented, effectiveness of the confo...
ABSTRACT. Projective Fourier analysis—geometric Fourier analysis of the group SL(2,C), the group ide...
AbstractEven at moderatos speeds, moving objects stimulate many retinal photoreceptors within the in...
Animal sensory systems are essential both to survival and competition. They, and their analogs in ro...
The data model for image representation in terms of projective Fourier transform (PFT) is well adapt...
We identify two properties of the human vision system, the foveated retina, and the ability to sac-c...
We implement a neural model for the estimation of the focus of radial motion (FRM) at different reti...
Primate vision is an active process that constructs a stable internal representation of the 3D world...
As we look around a scene, we perceive it as continuous and stable even though each saccadic eye mov...
As we look around a scene, we perceive it as continuous and stable even though each saccadic eye mov...
Our eyes move constantly at a frequency of 3–5 times per second. These movements, called saccades, i...
International audienceIn this paper we investigated the relevance of a robotic implementation in the...
The understanding of the subjective experience of a visually stable world despite the occurrence of ...
We present the development of computational models of biological motor control used in two different...
The spatial representation of a visual scene in the early visual system is well known. The optics of...
Active eye movements can be exploited to build a visuomotor representation of the surrounding enviro...
ABSTRACT. Projective Fourier analysis—geometric Fourier analysis of the group SL(2,C), the group ide...
AbstractEven at moderatos speeds, moving objects stimulate many retinal photoreceptors within the in...
Animal sensory systems are essential both to survival and competition. They, and their analogs in ro...
The data model for image representation in terms of projective Fourier transform (PFT) is well adapt...
We identify two properties of the human vision system, the foveated retina, and the ability to sac-c...
We implement a neural model for the estimation of the focus of radial motion (FRM) at different reti...
Primate vision is an active process that constructs a stable internal representation of the 3D world...
As we look around a scene, we perceive it as continuous and stable even though each saccadic eye mov...
As we look around a scene, we perceive it as continuous and stable even though each saccadic eye mov...
Our eyes move constantly at a frequency of 3–5 times per second. These movements, called saccades, i...
International audienceIn this paper we investigated the relevance of a robotic implementation in the...
The understanding of the subjective experience of a visually stable world despite the occurrence of ...
We present the development of computational models of biological motor control used in two different...
The spatial representation of a visual scene in the early visual system is well known. The optics of...
Active eye movements can be exploited to build a visuomotor representation of the surrounding enviro...
ABSTRACT. Projective Fourier analysis—geometric Fourier analysis of the group SL(2,C), the group ide...
AbstractEven at moderatos speeds, moving objects stimulate many retinal photoreceptors within the in...
Animal sensory systems are essential both to survival and competition. They, and their analogs in ro...