Publication | Closed Access
Selectivity for Polar, Hyperbolic, and Cartesian Gratings in Macaque Visual Cortex
540
Citations
27
References
1993
Year
Neural RecodingVisual NeuroscienceSingle CellsMacaque Visual CortexSocial SciencesGanglion CellVisual CognitionCartesian GratingsCognitive ScienceOphthalmologyConcentric GratingsVisual PathwayVision ResearchVisual ProcessingVisual FunctionNeuroanatomyComputational NeuroscienceNeuroscienceMedicine
The neural basis of pattern recognition is a central problem in visual neuroscience. Responses of single cells were recorded in area V4 of macaque monkey to three classes of periodic stimuli that are based on spatial derivative operators: polar (concentric and radial), hyperbolic, and conventional sinusoidal (Cartesian) gratings. Of 118 cells tested, 16 percent responded significantly more to polar or hyperbolic (non-Cartesian) gratings than to Cartesian gratings and only 8 percent showed a significant preference for Cartesian gratings. Among cells selective for non-Cartesian gratings, those that preferred concentric gratings were most common. Cells selective for non-Cartesian gratings may constitute an important intermediate stage in pattern recognition and the representation of surface shape.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1