Correlated activity supports efficient cortical processing

Chou P. Hung*, Ding Cui, Yueh Peng Chen, Chia Pei Lin, Matthew R. Levine

*此作品的通信作者

研究成果: 期刊稿件文章同行評審

9 引文 斯高帕斯(Scopus)

摘要

Visual recognition is a computational challenge that is thought to occur via efficient coding. An important concept is sparseness, a measure of coding efficiency. The prevailing view is that sparseness supports efficiency by minimizing redundancy and correlations in spiking populations. Yet, we recently reported that "choristers" neurons that behave more similarly (have correlated stimulus preferences and spontaneous coincident spiking), carry more generalizable object information than uncorrelated neurons ("soloists") in macaque inferior temporal (IT) cortex. The rarity of choristers (as low as 6% of IT neurons) indicates that they were likely missed in previous studies. Here, we report that correlation strength is distinct from sparseness (choristers are not simply broadly tuned neurons), that choristers are located in non-granular output layers, and that correlated activity predicts human visual search efficiency. These counterintuitive results suggest that a redundant correlational structure supports efficient processing and behavior.

原文英語
文章編號171
期刊Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience
8
發行號JAN
DOIs
出版狀態已出版 - 06 01 2015
對外發佈

文獻附註

Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Hung, Cui, Chen, Lin and Levine.

指紋

深入研究「Correlated activity supports efficient cortical processing」主題。共同形成了獨特的指紋。

引用此