A rodent model for the study of invariant visual object recognition
The human visual system is able to recognize objects despite tremendous variation in their appearance on the retina resulting from variation in view, size, lighting, etc. This ability-known as "invariant" object recognition-is central to visual perception, yet its computational underpinnin...
Main Authors: | Zoccolan, Davide (Contributor), DiCarlo, James (Contributor), Oertelt, Nadja (Author), Cox, David D. (Author) |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences (Contributor) |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
United States National Academy of Sciences,
2010-03-15T17:15:12Z.
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get fulltext |
Similar Items
-
What response properties do individual neurons need to underlie position and clutter "invariant" object recognition?
by: Li, Nuo, et al.
Published: (2011) -
How Does the Brain Solve Visual Object Recognition?
by: Zoccolan, Davide, et al.
Published: (2014) -
Comparing state-of-the-art visual features on invariant object recognition tasks
by: Pinto, Nicolas, et al.
Published: (2012) -
Why is real-world visual object recognition hard?
by: Nicolas Pinto, et al.
Published: (2008-01-01) -
Neuronal Learning of Invariant Object Representation in the Ventral Visual Stream Is Not Dependent on Reward
by: Li, Nuo, et al.
Published: (2012)