Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W4306180908> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W4306180908 endingPage "8979" @default.
- W4306180908 startingPage "8960" @default.
- W4306180908 abstract "Detecting object boundaries is crucial for recognition, but how the process unfolds in visual cortex remains unknown. To study the problem faced by a hypothetical boundary cell, and to predict how cortical circuitry could produce a boundary cell from a population of conventional “simple cells,” we labeled 30,000 natural image patches and used Bayes' rule to help determine how a simple cell should influence a nearby boundary cell depending on its relative offset in receptive field position and orientation. We identified the following three basic types of cell–cell interactions: rising and falling interactions with a range of slopes and saturation rates, and nonmonotonic (bump-shaped) interactions with varying modes and amplitudes. Using simple models, we show that a ubiquitous cortical circuit motif consisting of direct excitation and indirect inhibition—a compound effect we call “incitation”—can produce the entire spectrum of simple cell–boundary cell interactions found in our dataset. Moreover, we show that the synaptic weights that parameterize an incitation circuit can be learned by a single-layer “delta” rule. We conclude that incitatory interconnections are a generally useful computing mechanism that the cortex may exploit to help solve difficult natural classification problems. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Simple cells in primary visual cortex (V1) respond to oriented edges and have long been supposed to detect object boundaries, yet the prevailing model of a simple cell—a divisively normalized linear filter—is a surprisingly poor natural boundary detector. To understand why, we analyzed image statistics on and off object boundaries, allowing us to characterize the neural-style computations needed to perform well at this difficult natural classification task. We show that a simple circuit motif known to exist in V1 is capable of extracting high-quality boundary probability signals from local populations of simple cells. Our findings suggest a new, more general way of conceptualizing cell–cell interconnections in the cortex." @default.
- W4306180908 created "2022-10-14" @default.
- W4306180908 creator A5028361219 @default.
- W4306180908 creator A5034146158 @default.
- W4306180908 creator A5044948633 @default.
- W4306180908 date "2022-10-14" @default.
- W4306180908 modified "2023-10-14" @default.
- W4306180908 title "Object Boundary Detection in Natural Images May Depend on “Incitatory” Cell–Cell Interactions" @default.
- W4306180908 cites W109907426 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1497878968 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1504757957 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1530946731 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1785117108 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1821468701 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1901038953 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1907473214 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1919781602 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1954638517 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1964836266 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1965322047 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1971345512 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1977720868 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1988013646 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1990037101 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1993923750 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1997375364 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1997585233 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1997953085 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W1999844879 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2004544999 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2010684254 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2011073030 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2012723453 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2022186938 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2029346512 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2029683698 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2034292822 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2040715712 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2041642075 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2047175607 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2062624347 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2062870925 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2065755494 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2067501282 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2075724496 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2076832943 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2081139750 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2083296663 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2089823661 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2090871504 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2092813979 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2094094925 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2095757522 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2097620723 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2097961721 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2100218328 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2106700142 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2108384452 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2108653818 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2110158442 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2112796928 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2113055360 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2116360511 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2122707782 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2125975842 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2128523475 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2131801955 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2134832393 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2138720000 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2138924334 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2139783870 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2145889472 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2149194912 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2150600497 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2151189852 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2151709124 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2155261010 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2156406284 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2156423697 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2159145231 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2165422719 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2167076035 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2170319235 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2256679588 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2417135425 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2418285993 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2423540713 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2611047781 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2736039329 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2766010712 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W2797137185 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W3004502418 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W3022940290 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W4211013093 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W4221106133 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W4230102886 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W4238293977 @default.
- W4306180908 cites W4243861269 @default.