Illusions in the Ring Model of visual orientation selectivity
Romain Veltz, Olivier Faugeras

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the Ring Model of visual orientation selectivity, revealing neural illusions predicted by the model and providing a mathematical framework to compare its predictions with experimental data.
Contribution
It introduces an invariant polynomial reformulation of the Ring Model and demonstrates the existence of neural illusions, offering a new way to test the model experimentally.
Findings
Some tuning curves are not stimulus-tuned, interpreted as neural illusions.
Neural illusions can be induced by simple stimuli in simulations.
Theoretical analysis helps specify model parameters consistent with experiments.
Abstract
The Ring Model of orientation tuning is a dynamical model of a hypercolumn of visual area V1 in the human neocortex that has been designed to account for the experimentally observed orientation tuning curves by local, i.e., cortico-cortical computations. The tuning curves are stationary, i.e. time independent, solutions of this dynamical model. One important assumption underlying the Ring Model is that the LGN input to V1 is weakly tuned to the retinal orientation and that it is the local computations in V1 that sharpen this tuning. Because the equations that describe the Ring Model have built-in equivariance properties in the synaptic weight distribution with respect to a particular group acting on the retinal orientation of the stimulus, the model in effect encodes an infinite number of tuning curves that are arbitrarily translated with respect to each other. By using the Orbit Space…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVisual perception and processing mechanisms
