Encoding of Depth by RF Structure
Citation Info
DeAngelis, G.C., Ohzawa, I., and Freeman, R.D. (1991)
Depth is encoded in the visual cortex by a specialized receptive field structure.
Nature 352: 156-159.
Abstract
Binocular neurons in the visual cortex are thought to perform the
first stage of processing for the fine stereoscopic depth discrimination
exhibited by animals with frontally located eyes. Because lateral
separation of the eyes gives a slightly different view to each eye, there
are small variations in position (disparities), mainly along the horizontal
dimension, between corresponding features in the two retinal images. The
visual system uses these disparities to gauge depth. We studied neurons in
the cat's visual cortex to determine whether the visual system uses the
anisotropy in the range of horizontal and vertical disparities. We report
here that there is a corresponding anisotropy in the cortical
representation of binocular information: receptive-field profiles for left
and right eyes are matched for cells that are tuned to horizontal
orientations of image contours. For neurons tuned to vertical orientations,
left and right receptive fields are predominantly dissimilar. Therefore, a
major modification is required of the conventional notion of disparity
processing. The modified scheme allows a unified encoding of monocular form
and binocular disparity information.
See Also
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Additional on-line materials on the neural basis of stereopsis
Mathematica notebooks showing derivations and plots of model predictions.
Talk slides in Acrobat and PostScript.
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Encoding of binocular disparity by simple cells in the cat's visual cortex.
(J. Neurophysiol. 75: 1779-1805, 1996)
Ohzawa, DeAngelis, Freeman
-
Encoding of binocular disparity by complex cells in the cat's visual cortex.
(J. Neurophysiol. 77: 2879-2909, 1997)
Ohzawa, DeAngelis, Freeman
-
Neuronal mechanisms underlying stereopsis: how do simple cells in the
visual cortex encode binocular disparity?
(Perception 24: 3-31, 1995)
DeAngelis, Ohzawa, Freeman
-
Visual neuroscience. Misaligned viewpoints [news; comment].
(Nature 352: 109, 1991)