Publicacions CVC
Home
|
Show All
|
Simple Search
|
Advanced Search
|
Add Record
|
Import
You must login to submit this form!
Login
Quick Search:
Field:
main fields
author
title
publication
keywords
abstract
created_date
call_number
contains:
...
Edit the following record:
Author
...
is Editor
Title
...
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Book Chapter
Book Whole
Conference Article
Conference Volume
Journal
Magazine Article
Manual
Manuscript
Map
Miscellaneous
Newspaper Article
Patent
Report
Software
Year
...
Publication
...
Abbreviated Journal
...
Volume
...
Issue
...
Pages
...
Keywords
...
Abstract
Brightness induction is the modulation of the perceived intensity of an area by the luminance of surrounding areas and reveals fundamental properties of neural organization in the visual system. Several phenomenological models have been proposed that successfully account for psychophysical data (Pessoa et al. 1995, Blakeslee and McCourt 2004, Barkan et al. 2008, Otazu et al. 2008). Neurophysiological evidence suggests that brightness information is explicitly represented in V1 and neuronal response modulations have been observed followingluminance changes outside their receptive fields (Rossi and Paradiso, 1999). In this work we investigate possible neural mechanisms that offer a plausible explanation for such effects. To this end, we consider the model by Z.Li (1999) which is based on biological data and focuses on the part of V1 responsible for contextual influences, namely, layer 2–3 pyramidal cells, interneurons, and horizontal intracortical connections. This model has proven to account for phenomena such as contour detection and preattentive segmentation, which share with brightness induction the relevant effect of contextual influences. In our model, the input to the network is derived from a complete multiscale and multiorientation wavelet decomposition which makes it possible to recover an image reflecting the perceived intensity. The proposed model successfully accounts for well known pyschophysical effects (among them: the White's and modified White's effects, the Todorović, Chevreul, achromatic ring patterns, and grating induction effects). Our work suggests that intra-cortical interactions in the primary visual cortex could partially explain perceptual brightness induction effects and reveals how a common general architecture may account for several different fundamental processes emerging early in the visual pathway.
Address
...
Corporate Author
...
Thesis
Bachelor's thesis
Master's thesis
Ph.D. thesis
Diploma thesis
Doctoral thesis
Habilitation thesis
Publisher
...
Place of Publication
...
Editor
...
Language
...
Summary Language
...
Original Title
...
Series Editor
...
Series Title
...
Abbreviated Series Title
...
Series Volume
...
Series Issue
...
Edition
...
ISSN
...
ISBN
...
Medium
...
Area
...
Expedition
...
Conference
...
Notes
...
Approved
yes
no
Location
Call Number
...
Serial
Marked
yes
no
Copy
true
fetch
ordered
false
Selected
yes
no
User Keys
...
User Notes
...
User File
...
User Groups
...
Cite Key
...
Related
...
File
URL
...
DOI
...
Online publication. Cite with this text:
...
Location Field:
don't touch
add
remove
my name & email address
Home
SQL Search
|
Library Search
|
Show Record
|
Extract Citations
Help