An innovative model for the study of vision

A new study shows for the first time that the progressive processing of the visual signal underlying human object recognition is similarly implemented in the rat brain, thus extending the range of experimental techniques, from genetics to molecular biology and electrophysiology, that can be applied to the study of vision.

"Humans can recognise a face or an in a few tens of milliseconds, despite the fact that they may appear on our retina in an infinite number of ways, due to variations in brightness, size, orientation and position within the visual field. This capacity, known as invariant visual object recognition, is one of the fundamental properties of high-level vision and is due to the progressive processing of the through a specific sequence of cortical visual areas," says Davide Zoccolan, director of the SISSA visual neuroscience laboratory and head of the research project. "In our study, we have demonstrated the existence of a similar processing mechanism in rodents that opens up the possibility of studying the underlying neural circuits using a wide range of experimental techniques—molecular, genetic, electrophysiological, and so on, already applied in animal experiments."

Zoccolan's laboratory had already shown in a series of behavioural studies that rodents are able to carry out high-level visual object recognition tasks. "In this new study, we recorded the activity of hundreds of neurons belonging to four different visual cortical areas, from the primary visual cortex to the deepest visual area in temporal cortex, during a precise sequence of visual stimuli," he says. "These stimuli consisted of a sequence of 380 images obtained by presenting 10 different objects in 38 different ways, with variations in brightness, orientation or size. The objects were chosen in order to span a broad spectrum of visual properties. Some of them were digital reproductions of real objects, such as a face or a telephone, while others were abstract objects used in previous behavioural studies. Each image was presented for 250 milliseconds, more than enough for visual object recognition."

The recorded signals are complex and difficult to analyse, which is why it was essential the collaboration with Stefano Panzeri, director of the ITT neural computation laboratory in Rovereto and one of the leading experts in the development of algorithms for understanding the neural code using information theory and machine learning.

"We have observed that as we move from the to the deepest area in , information regarding light and contrast is lost, while the signal becomes increasingly invariant for transformations of single objects and increasingly discriminant of the identity of the objects, in the same way as occurs in primates," Zoccolan says. "It is a significant finding that opens up new pathways for the study of high-level vision and its development, as it does for the evolution of artificial vision systems."

Citation: An innovative model for the study of vision (2017, April 11) retrieved 25 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2017-04-vision.html
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