Evolving Concepts of Spatial Channels in Vision: From Independence to Nonlinear Interactions
- 1 August 1997
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Perception
- Vol. 26 (8), 939-960
- https://doi.org/10.1068/p260939
Abstract
By the 1960s it was evident from neuroanatomy that there were extensive recurrent interactions, both excitatory and inhibitory, among visual cortical neurons. Nevertheless, the psychophysical discovery of ‘spatial-frequency channels’ gave rise to a decade in which parallel, independent channels were thought to subserve early spatial vision. Recent work, however, has clearly demonstrated that early visual channels do not perform a Fourier or wavelet decomposition of the image. Instead, they interact through a variety of nonlinear pooling mechanisms. Such nonlinear interactions perform important computations in texture perception, stereopsis, and motion and form vision.Keywords
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