Morton-Style Factorial Coding of Color in Primary Visual Cortex
Abstract
We introduce the notion of Morton-style factorial coding and illustrate how it may help understand information integration and perceptual cod- ing in the brain. We show that by focusing on average responses one may miss the existence of factorial coding mechanisms that become only apparent when analyzing spike count histograms. We show evidence suggesting that the classical/non-classical receptive field organization in the cortex effectively enforces the development of Morton-style factorial codes. This may provide some cues to help understand perceptual cod- ing in the brain and to develop new unsupervised learning algorithms. While methods like ICA (Bell & Sejnowski, 1997) develop independent codes, in Morton-style coding the goal is to make two or more external aspects of the world become independent when conditioning on internal representations.
Cite
Text
Movellan et al. "Morton-Style Factorial Coding of Color in Primary Visual Cortex." Neural Information Processing Systems, 2002.Markdown
[Movellan et al. "Morton-Style Factorial Coding of Color in Primary Visual Cortex." Neural Information Processing Systems, 2002.](https://mlanthology.org/neurips/2002/movellan2002neurips-mortonstyle/)BibTeX
@inproceedings{movellan2002neurips-mortonstyle,
title = {{Morton-Style Factorial Coding of Color in Primary Visual Cortex}},
author = {Movellan, Javier R. and Wachtler, Thomas and Albright, Thomas D. and Sejnowski, Terrence},
booktitle = {Neural Information Processing Systems},
year = {2002},
pages = {221-228},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/neurips/2002/movellan2002neurips-mortonstyle/}
}