Grabbing, tracking and sniffing as models for motion detection and eye movements
Brain meeting @ FIL, London
- Time
- Jan 27, 2012, from 16:15 am to 17:00 pm
- Location
- Seminar room @ FIL, Queen's square, 4th floor.
reference
- Laurent U. Perrinet. Grabbing, tracking and sniffing as models for motion detection and eye movements, URL . In Brain meeting @ FIL, London - Friday, January 27th, 2012, 2012 abstract
Moving objects generate sensory information that may be noisy and ambiguous, yet it is important to be able to reconstruct object speed as fast as possible. One unsolved question is to understand how the brain pools motion information to give an efficient response. I will present computational models of motion detection in the visual system that try to answer this question. First, sensory information is grabbed by pooling the information from different sensory neurons. This pooling is modulated by the precision of information and we will present some recent model-based behavioural results. Then I will focus on a novel model of motion-based prediction that allows to track objects on smooth trajectories. This model gives an economical description of neural mechanisms associated with the processing underlying motion detection. Finally, we will propose an exploratory hypothesis such that eye movements may be understood as the prospective response to this dynamical sensory response knowing oculomotor constraints such as delays. This line of research aims at showing that through the convergent use of models, electrophysiology or behavioural responses, the study of motion detection is an essential tool in our understanding of neural computations.
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All material (c) L. Perrinet. Please check the copyright notice.
TagTalks TagYear12 TagBrainScales