Abstract

The visual system is split into two processing streams: a ventral stream that receives color and form information and a dorsal stream that receives motion information. Each stream processes that information hierarchically, with each stage building upon the previous. In the ventral stream this leads to the formation of object representations that ultimately allow for object recognition regardless of changes in the surrounding environment. In the dorsal stream, this hierarchical processing has classically been thought to lead to the computation of complex motion in three dimensions. However, there is evidence to suggest that there is integration of both dorsal and ventral stream information into motion computation processes, giving rise to intermediate object representations, which facilitate object selection and decision making mechanisms in the dorsal stream. First we review the hierarchical processing of motion along the dorsal stream and the building up of object representations along the ventral stream. Then we discuss recent work on the integration of ventral and dorsal stream features that lead to intermediate object representations in the dorsal stream. Finally we propose a framework describing how and at what stage different features are integrated into dorsal visual stream object representations. Determining the integration of features along the dorsal stream is necessary to understand not only how the dorsal stream builds up an object representation but also which computations are performed on object representations instead of local features.

Highlights

  • COMPUTATIONAL NEUROSCIENCEFeature integration and object representations along the dorsal stream visual hierarchy

  • Visual processing from the retina onwards is described as following two general principles

  • We investigated the effects of color on direction repulsion (Figure 2) to determine whether cross-stream feature integration affects direction discrimination, which would support the use of intermediate object representations in motion processing

Read more

Summary

COMPUTATIONAL NEUROSCIENCE

Feature integration and object representations along the dorsal stream visual hierarchy. This hierarchical processing has classically been thought to lead to the computation of complex motion in three dimensions. There is evidence to suggest that there is integration of both dorsal and ventral stream information into motion computation processes, giving rise to intermediate object representations, which facilitate object selection and decision making mechanisms in the dorsal stream. First we review the hierarchical processing of motion along the dorsal stream and the building up of object representations along the ventral stream. We discuss recent work on the integration of ventral and dorsal stream features that lead to intermediate object representations in the dorsal stream. We propose a framework describing how and at what stage different features are integrated into dorsal visual stream object representations.

INTRODUCTION
Perry and Fallah
HIERARCHICAL VISUAL PROCESSING
Findings
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call