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Visual Nonclassical Receptive Field Effects Emerge from Sparse Coding in a Dynamical System

Overview of attention for article published in PLoS Computational Biology, August 2013
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Title
Visual Nonclassical Receptive Field Effects Emerge from Sparse Coding in a Dynamical System
Published in
PLoS Computational Biology, August 2013
DOI 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003191
Pubmed ID
Authors

Mengchen Zhu, Christopher J. Rozell

Abstract

Extensive electrophysiology studies have shown that many V1 simple cells have nonlinear response properties to stimuli within their classical receptive field (CRF) and receive contextual influence from stimuli outside the CRF modulating the cell's response. Models seeking to explain these non-classical receptive field (nCRF) effects in terms of circuit mechanisms, input-output descriptions, or individual visual tasks provide limited insight into the functional significance of these response properties, because they do not connect the full range of nCRF effects to optimal sensory coding strategies. The (population) sparse coding hypothesis conjectures an optimal sensory coding approach where a neural population uses as few active units as possible to represent a stimulus. We demonstrate that a wide variety of nCRF effects are emergent properties of a single sparse coding model implemented in a neurally plausible network structure (requiring no parameter tuning to produce different effects). Specifically, we replicate a wide variety of nCRF electrophysiology experiments (e.g., end-stopping, surround suppression, contrast invariance of orientation tuning, cross-orientation suppression, etc.) on a dynamical system implementing sparse coding, showing that this model produces individual units that reproduce the canonical nCRF effects. Furthermore, when the population diversity of an nCRF effect has also been reported in the literature, we show that this model produces many of the same population characteristics. These results show that the sparse coding hypothesis, when coupled with a biophysically plausible implementation, can provide a unified high-level functional interpretation to many response properties that have generally been viewed through distinct mechanistic or phenomenological models.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
United States 3 2%
Japan 2 2%
Belarus 1 <1%
Germany 1 <1%
Belgium 1 <1%
Unknown 114 93%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 36 30%
Researcher 29 24%
Student > Master 18 15%
Student > Bachelor 9 7%
Professor > Associate Professor 8 7%
Other 16 13%
Unknown 6 5%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 26 21%
Neuroscience 24 20%
Computer Science 16 13%
Engineering 14 11%
Physics and Astronomy 10 8%
Other 24 20%
Unknown 8 7%