scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Task difficulty and the specificity of perceptual learning.

Merav Ahissar, +1 more
- 22 May 1997 - 
- Vol. 387, Iss: 6631, pp 401-406
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, the authors show that the degree of specificity depends on the difficulty of the training conditions, and that the pattern of specificities maps onto the patterns of receptive field selectivities along the visual pathway.
Abstract
Practising simple visual tasks leads to a dramatic improvement in performing them. This learning is specific to the stimuli used for training. We show here that the degree of specificity depends on the difficulty of the training conditions. We find that the pattern of specificities maps onto the pattern of receptive field selectivities along the visual pathway. With easy conditions, learning generalizes across orientation and retinal position, matching the spatial generalization of higher visual areas. As task difficulty increases, learning becomes more specific with respect to both orientation and position, matching the fine spatial retinotopy exhibited by lower areas. Consequently, we enjoy the benefits of learning generalization when possible, and of fine grain but specific training when necessary. The dynamics of learning show a corresponding feature. Improvement begins with easy cases (when the subject is allowed long processing times) and only subsequently proceeds to harder cases. This learning cascade implies that easy conditions guide the learning of hard ones. Taken together, the specificity and dynamics suggest that learning proceeds as a countercurrent along the cortical hierarchy. Improvement begins at higher generalizing levels, which, in turn, direct harder-condition learning to the subdomain of their lower-level inputs. As predicted by this reverse hierarchy model, learning can be effective using only difficult trials, but on condition that learning onset has previously been enabled. A single prolonged presentation suffices to initiate learning. We call this single-encounter enabling effect 'eureka'.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

View from the top: hierarchies and reverse hierarchies in the visual system.

TL;DR: It is proposed that explicit vision advances in reverse hierarchical direction, as shown for perceptual learning, and feature search "pop-out" is attributed to high areas, where large receptive fields underlie spread attention detecting categorical differences.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Reverse Hierarchy Theory of Visual Perceptual Learning

TL;DR: The Reverse Hierarchy Theory is extended to describe the dynamics of skill acquisition and interpret recent behavioral and electrophysiological findings.
Journal ArticleDOI

The musician's brain as a model of neuroplasticity.

TL;DR: Here, this work focuses on the functional and anatomical differences that have been detected in musicians by modern neuroimaging methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Practising orientation identification improves orientation coding in V1 neurons

TL;DR: Improved long-term neuronal performance resulted from changes in the characteristics of orientation tuning of individual neurons, which induces a specific and efficient increase in neuronal sensitivity in V1 of monkeys for learning orientation identification.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unsupervised Statistical Learning of Higher-Order Spatial Structures from Visual Scenes

TL;DR: Unsupervised learning of higher-order statistics provides support for Barlow's theory of visual recognition, which posits that detecting “suspicious coincidences” of elements during recognition is a necessary prerequisite for efficient learning of new visual features.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A feature-integration theory of attention

TL;DR: A new hypothesis about the role of focused attention is proposed, which offers a new set of criteria for distinguishing separable from integral features and a new rationale for predicting which tasks will show attention limits and which will not.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distributed Hierarchical Processing in the Primate Cerebral Cortex

TL;DR: A summary of the layout of cortical areas associated with vision and with other modalities, a computerized database for storing and representing large amounts of information on connectivity patterns, and the application of these data to the analysis of hierarchical organization of the cerebral cortex are reported on.
Journal ArticleDOI

Handbook of neuropsychology

Anna Berti
- 01 Jul 1992 - 
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

The binding problem

TL;DR: Deficits in neurological patients suggest a role for the parietal cortex in the binding process ofceptual representations, which depend on distributed neural codes for relaying the parts and properties of objects.
Related Papers (5)