DocumentCode :
423571
Title :
Concerning the mapping of ambiguous retinal output vectors onto unambiguous visual percepts
Author :
Eckmiller, Rolf ; Neumann, Dirk ; Baruth, And Oliver
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Bonn Univ., Germany
Volume :
1
fYear :
2004
fDate :
25-29 July 2004
Lastpage :
468
Abstract :
Summary form only given. From a systems theory and computational neuroscience perspective, the primate foveal visual system in the photopic range consists of a retina module as a large ensemble of spatio-temporal (ST) filters represented by the receptive field (RF) properties of mostly P- and Mganglion cells feeding into a corresponding central visual system module (VM). VM in turn elicits visual percepts P2 corresponding to optical input patterns P1. Human visual perception, which transcends neuroscience and biophysics, is considered here as the result of a sequence of two unidirectional mapping operations. The paper outlines a novel retina encoder (RE*) for mapping of optical patterns P1 onto vectors of ambiguous output signals; RE* serves both as retina module simulator and as neuroprosthetic retinal replacement. The paper also identifies essential requirements for the mapping of an ambiguous signal vector onto an unambiguous pattern. It also discusses perceptual consequences of a low-dimensional (e.g. 100) vector of multiple ganglion cell activity generated by RE* in blind subjects with an epiretinal, learning retina implant, vs. the high-dimensional vector of single ganglion cell activity generated by the human retina during normal vision.
Keywords :
artificial organs; eye; optical signal detection; visual perception; ambiguous retinal output vectors; ambiguous signal vector mapping; central visual system module; epiretinal learning retina implant; ganglion cell activity; human retina; human visual perception; neuroprosthetic retinal replacement; optical pattern mapping; primate foveal visual system; retina encoder; retina module simulator; spatiotemporal filters; unambiguous visual percepts; Biomedical optical imaging; Filtering theory; Humans; Neuroscience; Optical filters; Radio frequency; Retina; Signal mapping; Virtual manufacturing; Visual system;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Neural Networks, 2004. Proceedings. 2004 IEEE International Joint Conference on
ISSN :
1098-7576
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8359-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IJCNN.2004.1379951
Filename :
1379951
Link To Document :
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