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NN
2006
Springer

Attention in natural scenes: Neurophysiological and computational bases

13 years 4 months ago
Attention in natural scenes: Neurophysiological and computational bases
How does attention operate in natural scenes? We show that the receptive fields of inferior temporal cortex neurons that implement object representations become small and located at the fovea in complex natural scenes. This facilitates the readout of information about an object that may be reward or punishment associated, and may be the target for action. Top-down biased competition to implement attention has a much weaker effect in complex natural scenes than in otherwise blank scenes with two objects. Part of the solution to the binding problem is thus that competition and the foveal cortical magnification factor emphasize what is present at the fovea, and limit the binding problem. Part of the solution to the binding problem is that neurons respond to combinations of features present in the correct relative spatial positions. Stimulus-dependent neuronal synchrony does not appear to be quantitatively important in feature binding, and in attention, in natural visual scenes, at least ...
Edmund T. Rolls, Gustavo Deco
Added 14 Dec 2010
Updated 14 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2006
Where NN
Authors Edmund T. Rolls, Gustavo Deco
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