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A Neurocomputational account of the role of contour facilitation in brightness perception (CROSBI ID 266630)

Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Domijan, Dražen A Neurocomputational account of the role of contour facilitation in brightness perception // Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 9 (2015), 93, 16. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00093

Podaci o odgovornosti

Domijan, Dražen

engleski

A Neurocomputational account of the role of contour facilitation in brightness perception

A new filling-in model is proposed in order to account for challenging brightness illusions, where inducing background elements are spatially separated from the gray target such as dungeon, cube and grating illusions, bullseye display and ring patterns. This model implements the simple idea that neural response to low-contrast contour is enhanced (facilitated) by the presence of collinear or parallel high-contrast contours in its wider neighborhood. Contour facilitation is achieved via dendritic inhibition, which enables the computation of maximum function among inputs to the node. Recurrent application of maximum function leads to the propagation of the neural signal along collinear or parallel contour segments. When a strong global-contour signal is accompanied with a weak local-contour signal at the same location, conditions are met to produce brightness assimilation within the Filling-in Layer. Computer simulations showed that the model correctly predicts brightness appearance in all of the aforementioned illusions as well as in White's effect, Benary's cross, Todorovia's illusion, checkerboard contrast, contrast- contrast illusion and various variations of the White's effect. The proposed model offers new insights on how geometric factors (contour colinearity or parallelism), together with contrast magnitude contribute to the brightness perception.

assimilation ; brightness perception ; contrast ; computational model ; dendrites ; lateral inhibition

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Podaci o izdanju

9

2015.

93

16

objavljeno

1662-5161

10.3389/fnhum.2015.00093

Povezanost rada

Kognitivna znanost (prirodne, tehničke, biomedicina i zdravstvo, društvene i humanističke znanosti), Psihologija

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