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Journal ArticleDOI

Cortical interactions in texture processing: scale and dynamics.

Jonathan D. Victor, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1989 - 
- Vol. 2, Iss: 3, pp 297-313
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TLDR
It is shown that more elaborate models, in which a second nonlinear stage combines the output of local nonlinear mechanisms, are consistent with the data, provided that an appropriate spatial scale is chosen for the second stage of processing.
Abstract
We investigate the neural computations underlying pattern processing with stimuli based on textures balanced for spatial frequency content (and second-order correlations) but not for higher-order correlations (Julesz et al. 1978). Interchange between two such isodipole textures produces a robust human visual evoked potential (VEP). The difference in population activity driven by two isodipole textures is quantified by the antisymmetric component of the VEP. Statistical properties of the textures eliminate contributions from linear mechanisms to the antisymmetric VEP. The dependence of the antisymmetric VEP on check size and fourth-order correlation statistics is used to test nonlinear models for the underlying neural computations. Linear summation, followed by a simple nonlinearity (such as rectification, saturation, or threshold), is inconsistent with the data. More elaborate models, in which a second nonlinear stage combines the output of local nonlinear mechanisms, are consistent with the data, provided that an appropriate spatial scale is chosen for the second stage of processing. For checks 4 min or smaller, the deduced interaction length is 10-15 min. For checks larger than 4 min, the interaction length is proportional to check size.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring the spatial frequency selectivity of second-order texture mechanisms

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that there are differently scaled second-stage filters, and their contrast modulation sensitivity as a function of spatial frequency, and it is concluded that second-order texture perception appears to utilize multiple channels tuned to spatial frequency and orientation, with channels tuning to low modulation frequencies appearing to be best served by carrier frequencies 8 to 16 times higher than the modulations they are tuned to detect.
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Nonlinear processes in spatial-frequency channel models of perceived texture segregation: effects of sign and amount of contrast

TL;DR: In this paper, the degree of segregation between two textures, each composed of the same two element types but in differing arrangements (a checkerboard arrangement in the middle region of the pattern and a striped arrangement in top and bottom regions).
Journal ArticleDOI

Discrimination of oriented visual textures by poultry chicks

TL;DR: Results suggest that detection of line orientation and texture discrimination uses an achromatic signal derived either from the double cones, or summed outputs of long and medium wavelength sensitive single cones.
Journal ArticleDOI

Three stages and two systems of visual processing.

TL;DR: Two parallel perceptual regimes jointly serve human object recognition and motion perception: a first-order linear (Fourier) regime that computes relations directly from stimulus luminance, and a second-order nonlinear (nonFouriers) rectifying regime that uses the absolute value (or power) of stimulus contrast.
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Spatial summation in simple (fourier) and complex (non-fourier) texture channels

TL;DR: The results reported here suggest that the strongly compressive intensive nonlinearity previously known to act in texture segregation cannot be attributed to a compressive non linearity acting locally and relatively early but could result from inhibition among the channels (as in a normalization network).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The contrast sensitivity of retinal ganglion cells of the cat.

TL;DR: Spatial summation within cat retinal receptive fields was studied by recording from optic‐tract fibres the responses of ganglion cells to grating patterns whose luminance perpendicular to the bars varied sinusoidally about the mean level.
Journal ArticleDOI

Textons, the elements of texture perception, and their interactions

Bela Julesz
- 12 Mar 1981 - 
TL;DR: Research with texture pairs having identical second-order statistics has revealed that the pre-attentive texture discrimination system cannot globally process third- and higher- order statistics, and that discrimination is the result of a few local conspicuous features, called textons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial frequency selectivity of cells in macaque visual cortex

TL;DR: Among other things, it is shown that many stirate cells have quite narrow spatial bandwidths and at a given retinal eccentricity, the distribution of peak frequency covers a wide range of frequencies; these findings support the basic multiple channel notion.
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Spatial summation in the receptive fields of simple cells in the cat's striate cortex.

TL;DR: The responses of simple cells in the cat's atriate cortex to visual patterns that were designed to reveal the extent to which these cells may be considered to sum light‐evoked influences linearly across their receptive fields are examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visual Pattern Discrimination

TL;DR: The condition for discrimination was found to be based primarily on clusters or lines formed by proximate points of uniform brightness, and a similar rule of connectivity with hue replacing brightness was obtained by using varicolored dots of equal subjective brightness.
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