4.3 Article

A neural model of border-ownership from kinetic occlusion

期刊

VISION RESEARCH
卷 106, 期 -, 页码 64-80

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.visres.2014.11.002

关键词

Border-ownership; Figure-ground; Accretion/deletion; Kinetic edge; Motion; Inter-areal connection

资金

  1. CELEST [NSF SBE-0354378, OMA-0835976]
  2. Office of Naval Research [ONR N00014-11-1-0535]
  3. Air Force Office of Scientific Research [AFOSR FA9550-12-1-0436]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Camouflaged animals that have very similar textures to their surroundings are difficult to detect when stationary. However, when an animal moves, humans readily see a figure at a different depth than the background. How do humans perceive a figure breaking camouflage, even though the texture of the figure and its background may be statistically identical in luminance? We present a model that demonstrates how the primate visual system performs figure-ground segregation in extreme cases of breaking camouflage based on motion alone. Border-ownership signals develop as an emergent property in model V2 units whose receptive fields are nearby kinetically defined borders that separate the figure and background. Model simulations support border-ownership as a general mechanism by which the visual system performs figure-ground segregation, despite whether figure-ground boundaries are defined by luminance or motion contrast. The gradient of motion- and luminance-related border-ownership signals explains the perceived depth ordering of the foreground and background surfaces. Our model predicts that V2 neurons, which are sensitive to kinetic edges, are selective to border-ownership (magnocellular B cells). A distinct population of model V2 neurons is selective to border-ownership in figures defined by luminance contrast (parvocellular B cells). B cells in model V2 receive feedback from neurons in V4 and MT with larger receptive fields to bias border-ownership signals toward the figure. We predict that neurons in V4 and MT sensitive to kinetically defined figures play a crucial role in determining whether the foreground surface accretes, deletes, or produces a shearing motion with respect to the background. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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