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"A Neural Network Model of Spiral-Planar Motion Tuning in MSTd" |
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Scott A. Beardsley, Robert L. Ward, & Lucia M. Vaina
Brain & Vision Research Laboratory
Department of Biomedical Engineering
Boston University
Boston MA 02215
USA
Neurophysiological studies in
MSTd report the existence of motion pattern selective cells whose visual motion
properties span a continuum of values, suggesting a role in estimates of
self-motion from optic flow. Biologically motivated models of heading estimation
support this view, having identified similar visual motion properties within
their "neural" structures. While such models have addressed the computational
sufficiency of their respective feed-forward designs they have not explicitly
examined the underlying computational structures, particularly as they relate
to the interaction between planar and spiral motion responses within MSTd.
Here we use an expanded stimulus training set that includes planar motions
to extend the range of neurophysiological properties identified within an
existing network structure (Beardsley & Vaina 1998). In doing so, we quantify
the emergent planar motion properties within the network hidden layer and
examine how they interact, functionally and computationally, with cardinal/spiral
motion pattern responses. Throughout the hidden layer we demonstrate that
the input activation associated with a unit’s preferred planar motion is
consistent with an overlapping gradient hypothesis (Duffy & Wurtz 1991b).
Together with the change to a peripheral excitation profile in the presence
of a unit’s preferred spiral motion these results suggest a more complex
computational architecture in which the cell’s ‘classical’ receptive field
properties are dependent on the type of stimulus used to map them. Based
on the computational model we propose an experimental paradigm to investigate
the existence of equivalent computational structures in MSTd.
Beardsley, S.A., & Vaina, L.M. (1998), Computational modeling of optic
flow selectivity in MSTd neurons, Network: Comput. Neural Syst., 9,
467-493.
Duffy, C. J. & Wurtz, R. H. (1991a), Sensitivity of MST neurons to optic flow stimuli. I. A continuum of response selectivity to large-field stimuli", J. Neurophysiol. 65, 1329-1345.
Duffy, C. J. & Wurtz, R. H. (1991b), Sensitivity of MST neurons to optic flow stimuli. II. Mechanisms of response selectivity revealed by small-field stimuli, J. Neurophysiol. 65, 1346-1359.