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  The Visual System's Representation of Natural Images

McDonald, J., & Schultz, J. (2006). The Visual System's Representation of Natural Images. Poster presented at 9th Tübingen Perception Conference (TWK 2006), Tübingen, Germany.

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McDonald, JS1, Autor           
Schultz, J1, Autor           
Affiliations:
1Department Human Perception, Cognition and Action, Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Max Planck Society, ou_1497797              

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 Zusammenfassung: Previous studies (Atick and Redlich, Field, Webster and Miyahara) have investigated how the visual system could optimally represent the 1/f amplitude spectrum of natural images. Computational studies (Atick and Redlich, Field) suggest that the cortical representation ought to be a “whitened” version of the amplitude spectrum of natural images, i.e. spatial frequencies are equally represented despite the abundance of low spatial frequencies and dearth of high spatial frequencies in photographs of real world scenes. Webster and Miyahara showed that adaptation to natural images attenuates sensitivity to low spatial frequencies effectively supporting the computational evidence. We attempt to measure to what degree different spatial frequencies contribute to the percept of an image, in order to determine the extent of whitening of the input. To do this we adapted subjects briefly (250ms) to textures (4 x 4 degrees) of different spatial frequencies (1, 2, 4, 8, 16 cycles/degree, bandwidth 1.4 octaves—full width at half maximum). Then we measured the perceived contrast of 1/f textures in the adapted region of the visual field using the following procedure: After each interval of adaptation subjects judged whether the texture in the adapted region had a higher or lower contrast than that of the same texture in a non-adapted region. The contrast of the comparator texture (non-adapted) was changed after each time the subject made a judgement according to a 1 up 1 down staircase. We found that attenuation of perceived contrast, due to adaptation, is greatest when the adapting frequencies are at the peak of the contrast sensitivity function. It seems there is some “whitening”; however this is, at best, incomplete.

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 Datum: 2006-03
 Publikationsstatus: Erschienen
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Titel: 9th Tübingen Perception Conference (TWK 2006)
Veranstaltungsort: Tübingen, Germany
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