Steve Waydo
California Institute of Technology
Sparse Coding in the Human MTL: Experimental Results and Computational Modeling
Tuesday 17th of April 2007 at 12:30pm
3105 Tolman Hall (Beach Room)
Neurons have been identified in the human medial temporal lobe (MTL)
that display a strong selectivity for only a few stimuli (such as
familiar individuals or landmark buildings) out of perhaps 100
presented to the test subject (Quian Quiroga et al., Nature 2005).
While highly selective for a particular object or category, these
cells are remarkably insensitive to different presentations (i.e.
different poses and views) of their preferred stimulus. This
invariant, sparse, and explicit representation of the world may be
crucial to the transformation of complex visual stimuli into more
abstract memories. We first discuss the issue of how best to quantify
sparseness, particularly in very sparse systems where biases are
significant, and show the results of this analysis applied to human
MTL data (Waydo et al., J. Neurosci. 2006). From there we move into
the computational realm. Sparse coding as a computational constraint
applied to the representation of natural images has been shown to
produce receptive fields strikingly similar to those observed in
mammalian primary visual cortex (Olshausen & Field, 1996, 1997). We
apply sparse coding further along the visual hierarchy: not directly
to images but rather to an invariant feature-based representation of
images analogous to that found in inferotemporal cortex. This
combination of sparseness and invariance naturally leads to explicit
category representation. That is, by exposing the model to different
images drawn from different categories, we develop units that respond
selectively to different categories. We will show results of applying
this method both to unsupervised image category discovery and
differentiation between images of different individuals.(video)
Join Email List
You can subscribe to our weekly seminar email list by sending an email to
majordomo@lists.berkeley.edu that contains the words
subscribe redwood in the body of the message.
(Note: The subject line can be arbitrary and will be ignored)