ventral stream

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What are you looking at? Barbara Nordhjem Visual Neuroscience Group Laboratory of Experimental Ophthalmology University Medical Center Groningen Mechanisms of visual recognition.

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Object recognition and the ventral "what stream". Used for a university course on visual perception.

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Page 1: Ventral stream

What are you looking at?

Barbara Nordhjem

Visual Neuroscience Group

Laboratory of Experimental Ophthalmology

University Medical Center Groningen

Mechanisms of visual recognition.

Page 2: Ventral stream

Human recognition

• Gist of the scene at 7 images per second.

• Unpredictable random sequence of images

Potter 1971, 1975; Biederman 1972; Thorpe 1996 Movie by Jim DiCarlo

QuickTime™ and aSorenson Video 3 decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Page 3: Ventral stream

• Images change: object position, distance, pose, lighting and background clutter. Yet we know where to attend and what we are looking at.

Page 4: Ventral stream

Moving beyond V1

• What happens at the cellular level after V1?

Page 5: Ventral stream

Simple Cells

Hubel & Wiesel, 1959, 1962, 1965,1968

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Gradual more complex preferred stimulus

Tanaka, 1996

Page 7: Ventral stream

Illustration from Rousselet et al., 2004

Parallel increase in invariance properties (position and scale) of neurons

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Pathways in the brain

• Lesions parietal lobe (Newcombe, 1969)

• Ungerleider and Mishkin (1982) lesions in monkeys. Suggested regions organized in pathways

• Goodale and Milner (1992) distinguish between perception and action

Figure by Mike Cohen

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• The case of DF: visual form agnosia• Carbon monoxide poisoning• Lesion of lateral occipital cortex

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Goodale et al., 1991

Page 11: Ventral stream

Aglioti et al., 1995

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Are people attending to both constellations when they grasp?

Patient (AT) with parietal lesions was better grasping familiar than novel objects – interaction of memory and action control (Jeannerod et al., 1994).

Aglioti et al., 1995

Page 13: Ventral stream

Modules in the brain

Figure by Mike Cohen

Processing areas with the ventral pathway:

Faces, Objects, Places

Page 14: Ventral stream

Face and form agnosia

Some patients show a specific deficit for recognizing faces, others show deficits for recognizing all other objects.

Faces and objects are processed in separate, perhaps non-overlapping, brain areas.

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The idea of functionally specialized regions

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Lateral Occipital (LO)

Grill-Spector et al., 1998Malach, Levy, & Hasson, 2002

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Levels of recognition

Gauthier et al., 1999, 2000

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Visual awareness

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Andrews et al., 2002

Right FFA

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One-category

Two-category

Two types of bistable figures

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One-category Two-categories>

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Different ways of seeing

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Peripheral and central vision

Levy et al., 2001

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Form and texture

Cant & Goodale, 2007

Page 25: Ventral stream

Cant & Goodale, 2007

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Representation in ventral areas

Freeman& Simoncelli, 2011

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Honey et al, 2008

Spatial scales: coarse and fine representation

Olivia, 2007

Fast saccade bias towards faces, event for phase scrambled images

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More than one ventral pathway?

Page 29: Ventral stream

Summary

• Parallel increase in invariance to position and scale of neurons from V1 to IT

• Specialized information processing• Dorsal and ventral pathways for

action and perception• Keep in mind that the idea of

pathways and specialized regions is simplified

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