Abstract

Neural models of perception clarify how visual illusions arise from adaptive neural processes. Illusions also provide important insights into how adaptive neural processes work. This article focuses on two illusions that illustrate a fundamental property of global brain organization; namely, that advanced brains are organized into parallel cortical processing streams with computationally complementary properties. That is, in order to process certain combinations of properties, each cortical stream cannot process complementary properties. Interactions between these streams, across multiple processing stages, overcome their complementary deficiencies to compute effective representations of the world, and to thereby achieve the property of complementary consistency. The two illusions concern how illusory depth can vary with brightness, and how apparent motion of illusory contours can occur. Illusory depth from brightness arises from the complementary properties of boundary and surface processes, notably boundary completion and surface-filling in, within the parvocellular form processing cortical stream. This illusion depends upon how surface contour signals from the V2 thin stripes to the V2 interstripes ensure complementary consistency of a unified boundary/surface percept. Apparent motion of illusory contours arises from the complementary properties of form and motion processes across the parvocellular and magnocellular cortical processing streams. This illusion depends upon how illusory contours help to complete boundary representations for object recognition, how apparent motion signals can help to form continuous trajectories for target tracking and prediction, and how formotion interactions from V2-to-MT enable completed object representations to be continuously tracked even when they move behind intermittently occluding objects through time.

Highlights

  • ILLUSIONS ARISE FROM ADAPTIVE PROCESSES OF A COMPLEMENTARY BRAIN Neural models of perception have begun to explain how visual illusions arise from neural processes that play an adaptive role in achieving the remarkable perceptual capabilities of human and primate visual systems (e.g., Grossberg, 1994, 1997, 2008, 2014; Pinna and Grossberg, 2005, 2006; Tanca et al, 2010; Grossberg and Pinna, 2012; Cao and Grossberg, 2014)

  • Percepts that observers identify as illusions may arise from different brain processes, including: completion of perceptual groupings and filling-in of surface lightnesses and colors, leading to percepts of 3D form; transformation of ambiguous motion signals into coherent percepts of object motion direction and speed; and interactions between the form and motion cortical processing streams to generate percepts of moving-form-in-depth

  • ILLUSIONS THAT REFLECT FIGURE-GROUND SEPARATION AND TARGET TRACKING In summary, illusory depth from brightness arises from the complementary properties of boundary and surface processes, notably boundary completion and surface-filling in, within the parvocellular form processing cortical stream

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Summary

HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE

Illusory depth from brightness arises from the complementary properties of boundary and surface processes, notably boundary completion and surface-filling in, within the parvocellular form processing cortical stream. This illusion depends upon how surface contour signals from the V2 thin stripes to the V2 interstripes ensure complementary consistency of a unified boundary/surface percept. Apparent motion of illusory contours arises from the complementary properties of form and motion processes across the parvocellular and magnocellular cortical processing streams This illusion depends upon how illusory contours help to complete boundary representations for object recognition, how apparent motion signals can help to form continuous trajectories for target tracking and prediction, and how formotion interactions from V2-to-MT enable completed object representations to be continuously tracked even when they move behind intermittently occluding objects through time

INTRODUCTION
Complementary dynamics and visual illusions
METHODS AND RESULTS
Coarse Fine Fine
CONCLUSION

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