examples of object recognition in nature
echolocation
- e.g bats finding water = smooth surface targetted, rough surface avoided
electroreception
- fish create electric field and detect with electroreceptors and can detect any objects nearby
what is orientation invariance
being able to identify an object when it is at a different angle
what is scale invariance
being able to identify an object when it is a different size
heirarchical model of object recognition
categorisation
view-invariant object detection
detection of objects from one perspective
detection of object parts
detection of combination of edges and contours
detection of edges
lesions where decrease ability to recognise objects?
Lesions in inferior temporal cortex
role of lateral geniculate nucleus
sends information to primary visual cortex at back of brain
structure of lateral geniculate nucleus
what brain structure is linked to the ventral visual pathway
inferior temporal lobe
key structural features of LGN
what are blobs
what is the ventral pathway
figures out WHAT the object is
information that leads to the temporal lobe, which is involved with object and visual identification and recognition.
what is the dorsal pathway
finds out WHERE the object is
leads to the parietal lobe, which is involved with processing the object’s spatial location relative to the viewer and with speech repetition.
what is lateral geniculate nucleus
structure in thalamas
what layers of LGN are magnocellular and parvocellular cells?
The top four are parvocellular layers, two layers from each eye. Parvo (small) LGN cells receive inputs from (small) midget ganglion cells.
The bottom two are magnocellular layers, one layer from each eye. Magno (large) LGN cells receive inputs from (large) parasol ganglion cells
where do P and M ganglion cells send their axons?
Retinal P ganglion cells send axons to a parvocellular layer, M ganglion cells send axons to a magnocellular layer
which eyes send info to which layers of LGN?
the eye on the same side (the ipsilateral eye) sends information to layers 2, 3 and 5
the eye on the opposite side (the contralateral eye) sends information to layers 1, 4 and 6.
areas sending info to LGN
retina, visual cortex, superior colliculus, pretectum, thalamic reticular nuclei, and local LGN interneurons.
what is centre-surround organisation
role of the primary visual cortex
organisation of primary visual cortex
what determines orientation of receptive field in simple cells
how are receptive fields of simple cells elongated
each simple cell sums inputs from LGN neurones to build elongated receptive field responsive to bars and edges
features of simple cell receptive fields
features of complex cell receptive fields