Spatial and color hallucinations in a mathematical model of primary visual cortex
Olivier D. Faugeras, Anna Song, Romain Veltz

TL;DR
This paper presents a mathematical model of color and spatial activity in the primate visual cortex, analyzing bifurcations and solutions that may explain visual hallucinations induced by drugs.
Contribution
It introduces a novel equivariant bifurcation analysis of a cortical model linking spatial and color representations, including analytical solutions and stability analysis.
Findings
Identification of bifurcated solutions related to hallucinations
Analytical computation of invariant solutions
Discovery of stable localized patterns via snaking phenomena
Abstract
We study a simplified model of the representation of colors in the primate primary cortical visual area V1. The model is described by an initial value problem related to a Hammerstein equation. The solutions to this problem represent the variation of the activity of populations of neurons in V1 as a function of space and color. The two space variables describe the spatial extent of the cortex while the two color variables describe the hue and the saturation represented at every location in the cortex. We prove the well-posedness of the initial value problem. We focus on its stationary, i.e. independent of time, and periodic in space solutions. We show that the model equation is equivariant with respect to the direct product G of the group of the Euclidean transformations of the planar lattice determined by the spatial periodicity and the group of color transformations, isomorphic to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVisual perception and processing mechanisms · Neural dynamics and brain function · Face Recognition and Perception
