4.3 Article

What and where A Bayesian inference theory of attention

Journal

VISION RESEARCH
Volume 50, Issue 22, Pages 2233-2247

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.visres.2010.05.013

Keywords

Computational model; Attention; Bayesian inference; Object recognition

Funding

  1. DARPA [FA8650-06-C-7632, FA8650-09-1-7946]

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In the theoretical framework of this paper attention is part of the inference process that solves the visual recognition problem of what is where The theory proposes a computational role for attention and leads to a model that predicts some of its main properties at the level of psychophysics and physiology In our approach the main goal of the visual system is to infer the identity and the position of objects in visual scenes spatial attention emerges as a strategy to reduce the uncertainty in shape information while feature-based attention reduces the uncertainty in spatial information Featural and spatial attention represent two distinct modes of a computational process solving the problem of recognizing and localizing objects especially in difficult recognition tasks such as in cluttered natural scenes We describe a specific computational model and relate it to the known functional anatomy of attention We show that several well-known attentional phenomena - including bottom up pop out effects multiplicative modulation of neuronal tuning curves and shift in contrast responses - all emerge naturally as predictions of the model We also show that the Bayesian model predicts well human eye fixations (considered as a proxy for shifts of attention) in natural scenes (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved

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