PERCEPTION OF OCCLUDING CONTOURS - NEURAL MECHANISMS AND A COMPUTATIONAL MODEL

Citation
R. Vonderheydt et al., PERCEPTION OF OCCLUDING CONTOURS - NEURAL MECHANISMS AND A COMPUTATIONAL MODEL, Biomedical research, 14, 1993, pp. 1-6
Citations number
12
Categorie Soggetti
Medicine, Research & Experimental
Journal title
ISSN journal
03886107
Volume
14
Year of publication
1993
Supplement
4
Pages
1 - 6
Database
ISI
SICI code
0388-6107(1993)14:<1:POOC-N>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
Recent studies of neuronal responses to illusory contour figures were reviewed and the evidence for a simple bottom-up processing model was discussed. The model is based on the idea that the system infers occlu ding contours by combining the results of multiple parallel paths of c omputation, each of which exploits a specific cue. Its basic structure and many details were derived from single cell studies of areas V1 an d V2 of the monkey. A computer implementation of the model was shown t o predict the appearance and exact shape of various illusory contour f igures, as well as the figure-ground effect. It also generated contour maps on complex natural images that were significantly better than co nventional edge maps. New experiments showed that the contour cells in monkey V2 encode also the implied direction of figure and ground, as predicted from the model. Other models that have been proposed use rec urrent processing to explain illusory contours and figure-ground segre gation. Our results suggest that the mechanism might actually be simpl er, involving convolutions and nonlinear operations, but no feedback.