Published 1999 | Version v1
Publication

An architectural hypothesis for direction selectivity in the visual cortex: The role of spatially asymmetric intracortical inhibition

Description

Within a linear field approach, an architectural model for simple cell direction selectivity in the visual cortex is proposed. The origin of direction selectivity is related to recurrent intracortical interactions with a spatially asymmetric character along the axis of stimulus motion. No explicit asymmetric temporal mechanisms are introduced or adopted. The analytical investigation of network behavior, carried out under the assumption of a linear superposition of geniculate and intracortical contributions, shows that motion sensitivity of the resulting receptive fields emerges as a dynamic property of the cortical network without any feed-forward direction selectivity bias. A detailed analysis of the effects of the architectural characteristics of the cortical network on directionality and velocity-response curves was conducted by systematically varying the model's parameters.

Additional details

Identifiers

URL
http://hdl.handle.net/11567/247002
URN
urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/247002

Origin repository

Origin repository
UNIGE