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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Relations between the statistics of natural images and the response properties of cortical cells.

David J. Field
- 01 Dec 1987 - 
- Vol. 4, Iss: 12, pp 2379-2394
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TLDR
The results obtained with six natural images suggest that the orientation and the spatial-frequency tuning of mammalian simple cells are well suited for coding the information in such images if the goal of the code is to convert higher-order redundancy into first- order redundancy.
Abstract
The relative efficiency of any particular image-coding scheme should be defined only in relation to the class of images that the code is likely to encounter. To understand the representation of images by the mammalian visual system, it might therefore be useful to consider the statistics of images from the natural environment (i.e., images with trees, rocks, bushes, etc). In this study, various coding schemes are compared in relation to how they represent the information in such natural images. The coefficients of such codes are represented by arrays of mechanisms that respond to local regions of space, spatial frequency, and orientation (Gabor-like transforms). For many classes of image, such codes will not be an efficient means of representing information. However, the results obtained with six natural images suggest that the orientation and the spatial-frequency tuning of mammalian simple cells are well suited for coding the information in such images if the goal of the code is to convert higher-order redundancy (e.g., correlation between the intensities of neighboring pixels) into first-order redundancy (i.e., the response distribution of the coefficients). Such coding produces a relatively high signal-to-noise ratio and permits information to be transmitted with only a subset of the total number of cells. These results support Barlow's theory that the goal of natural vision is to represent the information in the natural environment with minimal redundancy.

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Citations
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Visual search in noise: revealing the influence of structural cues by gaze-contingent classification image analysis.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that even in very noisy displays, observers do not search randomly, but in many cases they deploy their fixations to regions in the stimulus that resemble some aspect of the target in their local image features.
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Processing of natural temporal stimuli by macaque retinal ganglion cells.

TL;DR: The approach used here helps define retinal modules useful for studies of higher visual processing of natural stimuli, and shows that for MC cells, coherence rates were generated almost exclusively by the luminance content of the stimulus.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Analyzing the role of visual structure in the recognition of natural image content with multi-scale ssim

TL;DR: This work investigates the first step toward an objective visual information evaluation: predicting the recognition threshold of different image representations, and advocates a multi-scale image structure analysis for a rudimentary evaluation of visual information.
References
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A mathematical theory of communication

TL;DR: This final installment of the paper considers the case where the signals or the messages or both are continuously variable, in contrast with the discrete nature assumed until now.
Journal ArticleDOI

Receptive fields, binocular interaction and functional architecture in the cat's visual cortex

TL;DR: This method is used to examine receptive fields of a more complex type and to make additional observations on binocular interaction and this approach is necessary in order to understand the behaviour of individual cells, but it fails to deal with the problem of the relationship of one cell to its neighbours.
Journal ArticleDOI

Theory of Edge Detection

TL;DR: The theory of edge detection explains several basic psychophysical findings, and the operation of forming oriented zero-crossing segments from the output of centre-surround ∇2G filters acting on the image forms the basis for a physiological model of simple cells.

Theory of communication

Dennis Gabor
Book

The Fourier Transform and Its Applications

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a broad overview of Fourier Transform and its relation with the FFT and the Hartley Transform, as well as the Laplace Transform and the Laplacian Transform.
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