Parsimony, exhaustivity and balanced detection in neocortex
Alberto Romagnoni, J\'er\^ome Ribot, Daniel Bennequin, Jonathan D., Touboul

TL;DR
This paper explores how principles of parsimony and exhaustivity shape the organization of visual cortex maps, revealing a trade-off in perception and sharpening of selectivity near singularities, with implications for cortical information processing.
Contribution
It provides a mathematical and computational framework linking principles to cortical map structures and validates predictions with physiological data, advancing understanding of cortical architecture.
Findings
Maps display co-located singularities with organized orientation and frequency.
Sharpening of spatial frequency selectivity occurs near singularities.
The cortex optimizes balanced detection of visual attributes.
Abstract
One fascinating aspect of the brain is its ability to process information in a fast and reliable manner. The functional architecture is thought to play a central role in this task, by encoding efficiently complex stimuli and facilitating higher level processing. In the early visual cortex of higher mammals, information is processed within functional maps whose layout is thought to underlie visual perception. The possible principles underlying the topology of the different maps, as well as the role of a specific functional architecture on information processing, is however poorly understood. We demonstrate mathematically here that two natural principles, local exhaustivity of representation and parsimony, would constrain the orientation and spatial frequency maps to display co-located singularities around which the orientation is organized as a pinwheel and spatial frequency as a dipole.…
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