Dynamic coding of border-ownership in visual cortex

Humans are capable of rapidly determining whether regions in a visual scene appear as figures in the foreground or as background, yet how figure-ground segregation occurs in the primate visual system is unknown. Figures in the environment are perceived to own their borders, and recent neurophysiolog...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of vision (Charlottesville, Va.) Vol. 12; no. 13; p. 8
Main Authors Layton, Oliver W, Mingolla, Ennio, Yazdanbakhsh, Arash
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.01.2012
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Summary:Humans are capable of rapidly determining whether regions in a visual scene appear as figures in the foreground or as background, yet how figure-ground segregation occurs in the primate visual system is unknown. Figures in the environment are perceived to own their borders, and recent neurophysiology has demonstrated that certain cells in primate visual area V2 have border-ownership selectivity. We present a dynamic model based on physiological data that indicates areas V1, V2, and V4 act as an interareal network to determine border-ownership. Our model predicts that competition between curvature- sensitive cells in V4 that have on-surround receptive fields of different sizes can determine likely figure locations and rapidly propagate the information interareally to V2 border-ownership cells that receive contrast information from V1. In the model border-ownership is an emergent property produced by the dynamic interactions between V1, V2, and V4, one which could not be determined by any single cortical area alone.
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ISSN:1534-7362
1534-7362
DOI:10.1167/12.13.8