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Perception involves a complex interaction between feedforward sensory-driven information and feedback attentional, memory, and executive processes that modulate such feedforward processing. A mechanistic understanding of feedforward and feedback integration is a necessary step towards elucidating key aspects of visual and cognitive functions and dysfunctions.
In this talk, I will describe a computational framework for the study of visual perception. I will present computational as well as experimental evidence suggesting that bottom-up and top-down processes make a distinct and essential contribution to the recognition of complex visual scenes. A feedforward hierarchical architecture may provide a satisfactory account of “immediate recognition” corresponding to the first few hundred milliseconds of visual processing. However, such an architecture may be limited in recognizing complex visual scenes. I will show how attentional mechanisms and cortical feedback may help improve object recognition performance in complex cluttered scenes. |