scholarly journals Towards a state-space geometry of neural responses to natural scenes: A steady-state approach

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce C. Hansen ◽  
David J. Field ◽  
Michelle R. Greene ◽  
Cassady Olson ◽  
Vladimir Miskovic

AbstractOur understanding of information processing by the mammalian visual system has come through a variety of techniques ranging from psychophysics and fMRI to single unit recording and EEG. Each technique provides unique insights into the processing framework of the early visual system. Here, we focus on the nature of the information that is carried by steady state visual evoked potentials (SSVEPs). To study the information provided by SSVEPs, we presented human participants with a population of natural scenes and measured the relative SSVEP response. Rather than focus on particular features of this signal, we focused on the full state-space of possible responses and investigated how the evoked responses are mapped onto this space. Our results show that it is possible to map the relatively high-dimensional signal carried by SSVEPs onto a 2-dimensional space with little loss. We also show that a simple biologically plausible model can account for a high proportion of the explainable variance (∼73%) in that space. Finally, we describe a technique for measuring the mutual information that is available about images from SSVEPs. The techniques introduced here represent a new approach to understanding the nature of the information carried by SSVEPs. Crucially, this approach is general and can provide a means of comparing results across different neural recording methods. Altogether, our study sheds light on the encoding principles of early vision and provides a much needed reference point for understanding subsequent transformations of the early visual response space to deeper knowledge structures that link different visual environments.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mariya E. Manahova ◽  
Eelke Spaak ◽  
Floris P. de Lange

AbstractFamiliarity with a stimulus leads to an attenuated neural response to the stimulus. Alongside this attenuation, recent studies have also observed a truncation of stimulus-evoked activity for familiar visual input. One proposed function of this truncation is to rapidly put neurons in a state of readiness to respond to new input. Here, we examined this hypothesis by presenting human participants with target stimuli that were embedded in rapid streams of familiar or novel distractor stimuli at different speeds of presentation, while recording brain activity using magnetoencephalography (MEG) and measuring behavioral performance. We investigated the temporal and spatial dynamics of signal truncation and whether this phenomenon bears relationship to participants’ ability to categorize target items within a visual stream. Behaviorally, target categorization performance was markedly better when the target was embedded within familiar distractors, and this benefit became more pronounced with increasing speed of presentation. Familiar distractors showed a truncation of neural activity in the visual system, and this truncation was strongest for the fastest presentation speeds. Moreover, neural processing of the target was stronger when it was preceded by familiar distractors. Taken together, these findings suggest that truncation of neural responses for familiar items may result in stronger processing of relevant target information, resulting in superior perceptual performance.Significance statementThe visual response to familiar input is attenuated more rapidly than for novel input. Here we find that this truncation of the neural response for familiar input is strongest for very fast image presentations. We also find a tentative function for this truncation: the neural response to a target image that is embedded within distractors is much greater when the distractors are familiar than when they are novel. Similarly, target categorization performance is much better when the target is embedded within familiar distractors, and this advantage is most obvious for very fast image presentations. This suggests that neural truncation helps to rapidly put neurons in a state of readiness to respond to new input.


NeuroImage ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 201 ◽  
pp. 116027 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce C. Hansen ◽  
David J. Field ◽  
Michelle R. Greene ◽  
Cassady Olson ◽  
Vladimir Miskovic

1978 ◽  
Vol 154 (3) ◽  
pp. 441-444 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.H. Whealton ◽  
G.G. Kelley ◽  
O.B. Morgan ◽  
G. Schilling

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Kaiser ◽  
Marius V. Peelen

AbstractTo optimize processing, the human visual system utilizes regularities present in naturalistic visual input. One of these regularities is the relative position of objects in a scene (e.g., a sofa in front of a television), with behavioral research showing that regularly positioned objects are easier to perceive and to remember. Here we use fMRI to test how positional regularities are encoded in the visual system. Participants viewed pairs of objects that formed minimalistic two-object scenes (e.g., a “living room” consisting of a sofa and television) presented in their regularly experienced spatial arrangement or in an irregular arrangement (with interchanged positions). Additionally, single objects were presented centrally and in isolation. Multi-voxel activity patterns evoked by the object pairs were modeled as the average of the response patterns evoked by the two single objects forming the pair. In two experiments, this approximation in object-selective cortex was significantly less accurate for the regularly than the irregularly positioned pairs, indicating integration of individual object representations. More detailed analysis revealed a transition from independent to integrative coding along the posterior-anterior axis of the visual cortex, with the independent component (but not the integrative component) being almost perfectly predicted by object selectivity across the visual hierarchy. These results reveal a transitional stage between individual object and multi-object coding in visual cortex, providing a possible neural correlate of efficient processing of regularly positioned objects in natural scenes.


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