The field of computational cognitive neuroscience (CCN) builds and tests neurobiologically detailed computational models that account for both behavioral and neuroscience data. This article leverages a key advantage of CCN-namely, that it should be possible to interface different CCN models in a plug-and-play fashion-to produce a new and biologically detailed model of perceptual category learning. The new model was created from two existing CCN models: the HMAX model of visual object processing and the COVIS model of category learning. Using bitmap images as inputs and by adjusting only a couple of learning-rate parameters, the new HMAX/COVIS model provides impressively good fits to human category-learning data from two qualitatively differ...
During natural vision, humans categorize the scenes they encounter: an office, the beach, and so on....
Category learning is a process through which common features among category members, distinctive fea...
There are many reports of patients who, after sustaining brain damage, exhibit a selective recogniti...
The human capacity for visual categorization is core to how we make sense of the visible world. Alth...
The goal of this proposal is to design a neurobiologically-based model that describes the switching ...
Considerable evidence has argued in favor of multiple neural systems supporting human category learn...
Although studies of categorization have been a staple of psy-chological research for decades, there ...
Marieke van der Linden investigated the neural mechanisms underlying category formation in the human...
This paper sketches several aspects of a hypothetical cortical architecture for visual object recogn...
Neurocomputational modeling of visual stimuli can lead not only to identify the neural substrates of...
A long standing debate in cognitive neuroscience has been the extent to which perceptual processing ...
A key goal of computational neuroscience is to link brain mechanisms to behavioral functions. The pr...
How do humans and animals learn to recognize objects and events? Two classical views are that exempl...
A neuropsychological theory is proposed that assumes category learning is a competition between sepa...
This paper continues the research that considers a new cognitive model based strongly on the human b...
During natural vision, humans categorize the scenes they encounter: an office, the beach, and so on....
Category learning is a process through which common features among category members, distinctive fea...
There are many reports of patients who, after sustaining brain damage, exhibit a selective recogniti...
The human capacity for visual categorization is core to how we make sense of the visible world. Alth...
The goal of this proposal is to design a neurobiologically-based model that describes the switching ...
Considerable evidence has argued in favor of multiple neural systems supporting human category learn...
Although studies of categorization have been a staple of psy-chological research for decades, there ...
Marieke van der Linden investigated the neural mechanisms underlying category formation in the human...
This paper sketches several aspects of a hypothetical cortical architecture for visual object recogn...
Neurocomputational modeling of visual stimuli can lead not only to identify the neural substrates of...
A long standing debate in cognitive neuroscience has been the extent to which perceptual processing ...
A key goal of computational neuroscience is to link brain mechanisms to behavioral functions. The pr...
How do humans and animals learn to recognize objects and events? Two classical views are that exempl...
A neuropsychological theory is proposed that assumes category learning is a competition between sepa...
This paper continues the research that considers a new cognitive model based strongly on the human b...
During natural vision, humans categorize the scenes they encounter: an office, the beach, and so on....
Category learning is a process through which common features among category members, distinctive fea...
There are many reports of patients who, after sustaining brain damage, exhibit a selective recogniti...