Sparseness of the neuronal representation of stimuli in the primate temporal visual cortex (1995)
| Venue: | Journal of Neurophysiology |
| Citations: | 49 - 21 self |
BibTeX
@ARTICLE{Rolls95sparsenessof,
author = {Edmund T. Rolls and Martin and J. Tovee},
title = {Sparseness of the neuronal representation of stimuli in the primate temporal visual cortex},
journal = {Journal of Neurophysiology},
year = {1995},
volume = {73},
pages = {713--726}
}
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OpenURL
Abstract
1. To analyze the selectivity and the sparseness of firing to visual stimuli of single neurons in the primate temporal cortical visual area, neuronal responses were measured to a set of 68 visual stimuli in macaques performing a visual fixation task. The popula-tion of neurons analyzed had responses that occurred primarily to faces. The stimuli included 23 faces, and 45 nonface images of real-world scenes, so that the function of this brain region could be analyzed when it was processing natural scenes. 2. The neurons were selected to meet the previously used crite-ria of face selectivity by responding more than twice as much to the optimal face as to the optimal nonface stimulus in the set. Application of information theoretic analyses to the responses of these neurons confirmed that their responses contained much more information about which of 20 face stimuli had been seen (on average 0.4 bits) than about which (of 20) nonface stimuli had







