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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Responses of striate cortex cells to grating and checkerboard patterns.

K. K. De Valois, +2 more
- 01 Jun 1979 - 
- Vol. 291, Iss: 1, pp 483-505
TLDR
The orientation tuning, spatial‐frequency tuning and responsiveness of cells to a plaid pattern were found to be predictable from the pattern's two‐dimensional Fourier spectrum, and both simple and complex striate cortex cells can be characterized as two-dimensional spatial‐ frequencies filters.
Abstract
1. Cells in visual cortex have been alternately considered as bar and edge detectors, or as spatial-frequency filters responding to the two-dimensional Fourier component of patterns. 2. The responses to gratings and to checkerboards allow one to test these alternate models: the Fourier components of a checkerboard pattern do not occur at the same orientation as the edges, nor do the checkerboard spatial frequencies correspond to the check widths. 3. Knowing the orientation tuning of a cell for gratings, one can precisely predict its orientation tuning to checkerboards from the orientation of the fundamental Fourier components of the patterns, not from the orientation of their edges. This was found for both square and rectangular checkerboards, and held for both simple and complex cortical cells. 4. Knowing the spatial tuning of a cell for sine-wave gratings, one can precisely predict its spatial tuning to square and rectangular checkerboards from the spatial frequencies of the fundamental Fourier components of the patterns, not from the widths of their checks. 5. When presented with checkerboards in which not the fundamental but the upper harmonics were within its spatial bandpass, a cell's orientation tuning was found to be predictable from the (quite different) orientation of the higher Fourier harmonic components, but not from the orientation of the edges. 6. Knowing a cell's contrast sensitivity for gratings, one can predict the cell's contrast sensitivity for checkerboards much more accurately from the amplitudes of the two-dimensional Fourier components of the patterns than from the contrasts of the patterns. 7. The orientation tuning, spatial-frequency tuning and responsiveness of cells to a plaid pattern were also found to be predictable from the pattern's two-dimensional Fourier spectrum. 8. Both simple and complex striate cortex cells can thus be characterized as two-dimensional spatial-frequency filters. Since different cells responsive to the same region in the visual field are tuned to different spatial frequencies and orientations, the ensemble of such cells would fairly precisely encode the two-dimensional Fourier spectrum of a patch of visual space.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Uncertainty relation for resolution in space, spatial frequency, and orientation optimized by two-dimensional visual cortical filters.

TL;DR: Evidence is presented that the 2D receptive-field profiles of simple cells in mammalian visual cortex are well described by members of this optimal 2D filter family, and thus such visual neurons could be said to optimize the general uncertainty relations for joint 2D-spatial-2D-spectral information resolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

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

TL;DR: 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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multifrequency channel decompositions of images and wavelet models

TL;DR: The author describes the mathematical properties of such decompositions and introduces the wavelet transform, which relates to the decomposition of an image into a wavelet orthonormal basis.
Journal ArticleDOI

An evaluation of the two-dimensional Gabor filter model of simple receptive fields in cat striate cortex

TL;DR: It seems that an optimal strategy has evolved for sampling images simultaneously in the 2D spatial and spatial frequency domains and the Gabor function provides a useful and reasonably accurate description of most spatial aspects of simple receptive fields.
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.
References
More filters
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

Receptive fields of single neurones in the cat's striate cortex

TL;DR: The present investigation, made in acute preparations, includes a study of receptive fields of cells in the cat's striate cortex, which resembled retinal ganglion-cell receptive fields, but the shape and arrangement of excitatory and inhibitory areas differed strikingly from the concentric pattern found in retinalganglion cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Application of fourier analysis to the visibility of gratings

TL;DR: The contrast thresholds of a variety of grating patterns have been measured over a wide range of spatial frequencies and the results show clear patterns of uniformity in the response to grating noise.
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

Optical and retinal factors affecting visual resolution.

TL;DR: An improved version of the well-known interference fringe technique which theoretically allows a sinusoidal pattern of very high contrast to be formed directly on the retina to be obtained without prior modification by the optics of the eye is reported.
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