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date: 06 December 2023

Visual Shape and Object Perceptionlocked

Visual Shape and Object Perceptionlocked

  • Anitha Pasupathy, Anitha PasupathyDepartment of Biological Structure, University of Washington
  • Yasmine El-ShamaylehYasmine El-ShamaylehDepartment of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington
  •  and Dina V. PopovkinaDina V. PopovkinaDepartment of Neuroscience, University of Washington

Summary

Humans and other primates rely on vision. Our visual system endows us with the ability to perceive, recognize, and manipulate objects, to avoid obstacles and dangers, to choose foods appropriate for consumption, to read text, and to interpret facial expressions in social interactions. To support these visual functions, the primate brain captures a high-resolution image of the world in the retina and, through a series of intricate operations in the cerebral cortex, transforms this representation into a percept that reflects the physical characteristics of objects and surfaces in the environment. To construct a reliable and informative percept, the visual system discounts the influence of extraneous factors such as illumination, occlusions, and viewing conditions. This perceptual “invariance” can be thought of as the brain’s solution to an inverse inference problem in which the physical factors that gave rise to the retinal image are estimated. While the processes of perception and recognition seem fast and effortless, it is a challenging computational problem that involves a substantial proportion of the primate brain.

Subjects

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Computational Neuroscience
  • Sensory Systems

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