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Visual illusions via neural dynamics: Wilson-Cowan-type models and the efficient representation principle

We reproduce suprathreshold perception phenomena, specifically visual illusions, by Wilson-Cowan (WC)-type models of neuronal dynamics. Our findings show that the ability to replicate the illusions considered is related to how well the neural activity equations comply with the efficient representati...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of neurophysiology 2020-05, Vol.123 (5), p.1606-1618
Main Authors: BertalmĂ­o, Marcelo, Calatroni, Luca, Franceschi, Valentina, Franceschiello, Benedetta, Gomez Villa, Alexander, Prandi, Dario
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:We reproduce suprathreshold perception phenomena, specifically visual illusions, by Wilson-Cowan (WC)-type models of neuronal dynamics. Our findings show that the ability to replicate the illusions considered is related to how well the neural activity equations comply with the efficient representation principle. Our first contribution consists in showing that the WC equations can reproduce a number of brightness and orientation-dependent illusions. Then we formally prove that there cannot be an energy functional that the WC dynamics are minimizing. This leads us to consider an alternative, variational modeling, which has been previously employed for local histogram equalization (LHE) tasks. To adapt our model to the architecture of V1, we perform an extension that has an explicit dependence on local image orientation. Finally, we report several numerical experiments showing that LHE provides a better reproduction of visual illusions than the original WC formulation, and that its cortical extension is capable also to reproduce complex orientation-dependent illusions. We show that the Wilson-Cowan equations can reproduce a number of brightness and orientation-dependent illusions. Then we formally prove that there cannot be an energy functional that the Wilson-Cowan equations are minimizing, making them suboptimal with respect to the efficient representation principle. We thus propose a slight modification that is consistent with such principle and show that this provides a better reproduction of visual illusions than the original Wilson-Cowan formulation. We also consider the cortical extension of both models to deal with more complex orientation-dependent illusions.
ISSN:0022-3077
1522-1598
DOI:10.1152/jn.00488.2019