Models of primate supraretinal visual representations

<p>This thesis investigates a set of non-classical visual receptive field properties observed in the primate brain. Two main phenomena were explored. The first phenomenon was neurons with head-centered visual receptive fields, in which a neuron responds maximally to a visual stimulus in the sa...

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Bibliografiset tiedot
Päätekijä: Mender, B
Muut tekijät: Maitland, S
Aineistotyyppi: Opinnäyte
Kieli:English
Julkaistu: 2014
Aiheet:
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author Mender, B
author2 Maitland, S
author_facet Maitland, S
Mender, B
author_sort Mender, B
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis investigates a set of non-classical visual receptive field properties observed in the primate brain. Two main phenomena were explored. The first phenomenon was neurons with head-centered visual receptive fields, in which a neuron responds maximally to a visual stimulus in the same head-centered location across all eye positions. The second phenomenon was perisaccadic receptive field dynamics, which involves a range of experimentally observed response behaviours of an eye-centered neuron associated with the advent of a saccade that relocates the neuron's receptive field. For each of these two phenomena, a hypothesis was proposed for how a neural circuit with a suitable initial architecture and synaptic learning rules could, when subjected to visually-guided training, develop the receptive field properties in question. Corresponding neural network models were first trained as hypothesized, and subsequently tested in conditions similar to experimental tasks used to interrogate the physiology of the relevant primate neural circuits. The behaviour of the models was compared to neurophysiological observations as a metric for their explanatory power. In both cases the neural network models were in broad agreement with experimental observations, and the operation of these models was studied to shed light on the neural processing behind these neural phenomena in the brain.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:ce1fff8e-db5c-46e4-b5aa-7439465c2a772022-03-27T07:33:37ZModels of primate supraretinal visual representationsThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:ce1fff8e-db5c-46e4-b5aa-7439465c2a77NeuroscienceEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2014Mender, BMaitland, S<p>This thesis investigates a set of non-classical visual receptive field properties observed in the primate brain. Two main phenomena were explored. The first phenomenon was neurons with head-centered visual receptive fields, in which a neuron responds maximally to a visual stimulus in the same head-centered location across all eye positions. The second phenomenon was perisaccadic receptive field dynamics, which involves a range of experimentally observed response behaviours of an eye-centered neuron associated with the advent of a saccade that relocates the neuron's receptive field. For each of these two phenomena, a hypothesis was proposed for how a neural circuit with a suitable initial architecture and synaptic learning rules could, when subjected to visually-guided training, develop the receptive field properties in question. Corresponding neural network models were first trained as hypothesized, and subsequently tested in conditions similar to experimental tasks used to interrogate the physiology of the relevant primate neural circuits. The behaviour of the models was compared to neurophysiological observations as a metric for their explanatory power. In both cases the neural network models were in broad agreement with experimental observations, and the operation of these models was studied to shed light on the neural processing behind these neural phenomena in the brain.</p>
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Mender, B
Models of primate supraretinal visual representations
title Models of primate supraretinal visual representations
title_full Models of primate supraretinal visual representations
title_fullStr Models of primate supraretinal visual representations
title_full_unstemmed Models of primate supraretinal visual representations
title_short Models of primate supraretinal visual representations
title_sort models of primate supraretinal visual representations
topic Neuroscience
work_keys_str_mv AT menderb modelsofprimatesupraretinalvisualrepresentations