maandag 24 januari 2011

Intrinsic position uncertainty explains detection and localization performance in peripheral vision

Feed: Journal of Vision current issue
Posted on: vrijdag 21 januari 2011 15:23
Author: Michel, M., Geisler, W. S.
Subject: Intrinsic position uncertainty explains detection and localization performance in peripheral vision

 

Efficient performance in visual detection tasks requires excluding signals from irrelevant spatial locations. Indeed, researchers have found that detection performance in many tasks involving multiple potential target locations can be explained by the uncertainty the added locations contribute to the task. A similar type of Location Uncertainty may arise within the visual system itself. Converging evidence from hyperacuity and crowding studies suggests that feature localization declines rapidly in peripheral vision. This decline should add inherent position uncertainty to detection tasks. The current study used a modified detection task to measure how intrinsic position uncertainty changes with eccentricity. Subjects judged whether a Gabor target appeared within a cued region of a noisy display. The eccentricity and size of the region varied across blocks. When subjects detected the target, they used a mouse to indicate its location. This allowed measurement of localization as well as detection errors. An ideal observer degraded with internal response noise and position noise (uncertainty) accounted for both the detection and localization performance of the subjects. The results suggest that position uncertainty grows linearly with visual eccentricity and is independent of target contrast. Intrinsic position uncertainty appears to be a critical factor limiting search and detection performance.


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zondag 23 januari 2011

When global structure “Explains Away” local grammar: A Bayesian account of r...

 
 

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Publication year: 2011
Source: Cognition, In Press, Corrected Proof, Available online 22 January 2011
Colin, Dawson , LouAnn, Gerken
While many constraints on learning must be relatively experience-independent, past experience provides a rich source of guidance for subsequent learning. Discovering structure in some domain can inform a learner's future hypotheses about that domain. If a general property accounts for particular sub-patterns, a rational learner should not stipulate separate explanations for each detail without additional evidence, as the general structure has "explained away" the original evidence. In a grammar-learning experiment using tone sequences, manipulating learners' prior exposure to a tone environment affects their sensitivity to the grammar-defining feature, in this case consecutive repeated tones. Grammar-learning performance is worse if context...

 
 

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vrijdag 21 januari 2011

To Honor Fechner and Obey Stevens: Relationships Between Psychophysical and ...

 
 

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Publication year: 2011
Source: Psychological Bulletin, Volume 137, Issue 1, January 2011, Pages 1-18
Vincent A., Billock , Brian H., Tsou
G. T. Fechner (1860/1966) famously described two kinds of psychophysics: Outer psychophysics captures the black box relationship between sensory inputs and perceptual magnitudes, whereas inner psychophysics contains the neural transformations that Fechner's outer psychophysics elided. The relationship between the two has never been clear. Moreover, psychophysical power laws are found in almost every sensory system, yet the vast majority of neurons show sigmoid nonlinearities. Here, we selectively review the literatures on psychophysical and physiological nonlinearities and show how they can be placed within a framework for understanding the relationship between inner and outer psychophysics: a neural organization with a logical...

 
 

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donderdag 13 januari 2011

Role of prefrontal cortex in conscious visual perception.

 
 

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via pubmed: ((((((((((((figure) ... by Libedinsky C, Livingstone M on 1/13/11

Role of prefrontal cortex in conscious visual perception.

J Neurosci. 2011 Jan 5;31(1):64-9

Authors: Libedinsky C, Livingstone M

Early visual areas are required for conscious visual perception, but recent evidence suggests that parts of the frontal lobe might also play a key role. However, it remains unclear whether frontal brain areas are involved in visual perception or merely use information from visual regions to drive behavior. One such frontal cortical area, the frontal-eye field (FEF), has been shown to have fast visual responses, thought to reflect mostly low-level visual processing, and delayed responses that correlate with perceptual reports. The latter observation is consistent with the idea that FEF uses visual information from (slower) visual regions to guide behavior. Here we ask whether fast visual responses in FEF also carry information related to the perceptual state of animals. We recorded single-cell activity in two monkeys trained to report the presence or absence of a visual target under conditions that evoke the illusory disappearance of the target (motion-induced blindness). We found that fast responses in FEF strongly correlated with the perceptual report of the animal. It is unlikely that short-latency perceptually correlated activity is inherited from early visual areas, since response latencies in FEF are shorter than those of visual areas with perceptually correlated activity. These results suggest that frontal brain areas are involved in generating the contents of visual perception.

PMID: 21209190 [PubMed - in process]


 
 

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The visual word form system in context.

 
 

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via pubmed: ((((((((((((figure) ... by Woodhead ZV, Brownsett SL, Dhanjal NS, Beckmann C, Wise RJ on 1/13/11

The visual word form system in context.

J Neurosci. 2011 Jan 5;31(1):193-9

Authors: Woodhead ZV, Brownsett SL, Dhanjal NS, Beckmann C, Wise RJ

According to the "modular" hypothesis, reading is a serial feedforward process, with part of left ventral occipitotemporal cortex the earliest component tuned to familiar orthographic stimuli. Beyond this region, the model predicts no response to arrays of false font in reading-related neural pathways. An alternative "connectionist" hypothesis proposes that reading depends on interactions between feedforward projections from visual cortex and feedback projections from phonological and semantic systems, with no visual component exclusive to orthographic stimuli. This is compatible with automatic processing of false font throughout visual and heteromodal sensory pathways that support reading, in which responses to words may be greater than, but not exclusive of, responses to false font. This functional imaging study investigated these alternative hypotheses by using narrative texts and equivalent arrays of false font and varying the hemifield of presentation using rapid serial visual presentation. The "null" baseline comprised a decision on visually presented numbers. Preferential activity for narratives relative to false font, insensitive to hemifield of presentation, was distributed along the ventral left temporal lobe and along the extent of both superior temporal sulci. Throughout this system, activity during the false font conditions was significantly greater than during the number task, with activity specific to the number task confined to the intraparietal sulci. Therefore, both words and false font are extensively processed along the same temporal neocortical pathways, separate from the more dorsal pathways that process numbers. These results are incompatible with a serial, feedforward model of reading.

PMID: 21209204 [PubMed - in process]


 
 

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Predictive remapping of attention across eye movements

 
 

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via Nature Neuroscience - AOP - nature.com science feeds by Patrick Cavanagh on 12/26/10

Predictive remapping of attention across eye movements

Nature Neuroscience. doi:10.1038/nn.2711

Authors: Martin Rolfs, Donatas Jonikaitis, Heiner Deubel & Patrick Cavanagh


 
 

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Decoding the activity of neuronal populations in macaque primary visual cortex

 
 

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via Nature Neuroscience - AOP - nature.com science feeds by J Anthony Movshon on 1/9/11

Decoding the activity of neuronal populations in macaque primary visual cortex

Nature Neuroscience. doi:10.1038/nn.2733

Authors: Arnulf B A Graf, Adam Kohn, Mehrdad Jazayeri & J Anthony Movshon


 
 

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woensdag 12 januari 2011

Forum: Secrets of creativity : Semir Zeki, Charles Simic, Julian Treasure. 9...

 
 

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This week on the Forum, what drives us to be creative. Neurobiologist Semir Zeki on how dissatisfaction fuels creativity. Serbian American poet Charles Simic on why translation is impossible and therefore a highly creative act. And sound consultant Julian Treasure on the influence of our sound environment on productivity.

 
 

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Skepticality #147 - Sleights of Mind - Interview: Stephen L. Macknik PhD and...

Interview starts around 8 minutes into the program.

 
 

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In order to accomplish amazing illusions and magic tricks, performers of prestidigitation must be well versed in the art of deception; thus, it is not surprising that many of the world's most renowned skeptics are also world-class magicians.

This week on Skepticality, Swoopy talks with Dr. Stephen L. Macknik and Dr. Susana Martinez-Conde, co-authors of Sleights of Mind: What the Neuroscience of Magic Reveals About Our Everyday Deceptions (with Sandra Blakeslee). Both are laboratory directors at the Barrow Neurological Institute and columnists at ScientificAmerican.com - experience they bring to their multi-year, world-wide exploration of magic (with a team of advisors including Jamy Ian Swiss, the late Jerry Andrus, and James "The Amazing" Randi). Can ancient principles of the conjurer's trade be explained using the latest discoveries of cognitive neuroscience? Find out on this episode!

 


 
 

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dinsdag 11 januari 2011

ECVP2011 website

The ECVP2011 website is now online:

http://www.ecvp2011.org/ecvp/index.php

vrijdag 7 januari 2011

Ten Simple Rules for Getting Ahead as a Computational Biologist in Academia

Just something possibly of general interest.

 
 

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Motion Silences Awareness of Visual Change

These guys say that we "fail to notice when moving objects are changing". They have demos in the suppl. – check it out, it's amazing!

 
 

Naudojant „Google Reader" atsiųsta jums nuo Jonas:

 
 

per CURRENT BIOLOGY 11.1.5

Jordan W. Suchow, George A. Alvarez. Loud bangs, bright flashes, and intense shocks capture attention, but other changes—even those of similar magnitude—can go unnoticed. Demonstrations of change blindness have shown that observers f....

 
 

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