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Orientation column

About: Orientation column is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1142 publications have been published within this topic receiving 130169 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the striate and temporal cortex of tree shrews were examined for visual responses to visual stimuli, and it was shown that visual stimulation continued to activate only 12% of temporal neurons.

4 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A neural model is proposed for the spatiotemporal properties of simple cells in the visual cortex that shows that the inseparable cells have directional selectivity as observed physiologically.
Abstract: A neural model is proposed for the spatiotemporal properties of simple cells in the visual cortex. In the model, several cortical cells are arranged on a ring, with mutual excitatory or inhibitory connections. The cells also receive excitatory inputs either from lagged and nonlagged cells of the lateral geniculate nucleus in one setting or from nonlagged cells in the other. Computer simulation shows that the cortical cells have spatiotemporally inseparable receptive fields in the former setting and separable fields in the latter; spatial profiles at a given time in the spatiotemporal fields are described with a Gabor function whose phase parameter varies regularly from 0 to 2π with rotation along the ring; the inseparable cells have directional selectivity as observed physiologically.

4 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A developmental rationale is proposed for the circuitry underlying the generation of fine retinotopic mappings, the quantitative range of simple-cell stimulus preferences, and the psychophysical performance of the visual system.
Abstract: A developmental rationale is proposed for the circuitry underlying the generation of fine retinotopic mappings, the quantitative range of simple-cell stimulus preferences, and the psychophysical performance of the visual system. It is assumed that the retina consists of a mosaic of partially overlapping elements, or hyperfields, which are laid down in a sunflower-seed pattern. These hyperfields project to a corresponding rectilinear mosaic of hypercolumns in the cortex, according to a pattern of chemoaffinities. Each hyperfield, in turn, consists of a sunflower-seed mosaic of nonoverlapping ganglion-cell receptive-field centres, which project to a matching rectilinear mosaic of minicolumns in the corresponding hypercolumn. Retinotopic order is produced in the hyperfield-hypercolumn mapping by radially symmetric inhibitory links, between cortical cells more than two minicolumns apart, which operate on Hebb-modifiable retinocortical excitatory afferent fibres. Under this mapping, hyperfield radii map onto parallel rows of minicolumns (orientation columns), and concentric semicircles of ganglion-cell receptive fields map onto spatial-frequency columns, crossing orientation columns at right angles. The 'scatter' in this mapping is equivalent to one local average receptive-field diameter. Orientation-related stimulus preferences ar produced by asymmetrical inhibitory links between cells more than two minicolumns apart, in the same spatial-frequency columns. A third network of inhibitory circuits, with Hebb-modifiable synapses, is assumed to operate between cells in the same or immediately adjacent minicolumns. This network enhances stimulus selectivity and sensitivity in simple and hypercomplex cells, and is responsible for adaptation aftereffects and sensory information storage.

4 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20231
20223
20212
20208
20192
20189