Category Learning Through Multimodality Sensing
- 1 July 1998
- journal article
- Published by MIT Press in Neural Computation
- Vol. 10 (5) , 1097-1117
- https://doi.org/10.1162/089976698300017368
Abstract
Humans and other animals learn to form complex categories without receiving a target output, or teaching signal, with each input pattern. In contrast, most computer algorithms that emulate such performance assume the brain is provided with the correct output at the neuronal level or require grossly unphysiological methods of information propagation. Natural environments do not contain explicit labeling signals, but they do contain important information in the form of temporal correlations between sensations to different sensory modalities, and humans are affected by this correlational structure (Howells, 1944; McGurk & MacDonald, 1976; MacDonald & McGurk, 1978; Zellner & Kautz, 1990; Durgin & Proffitt, 1996). In this article we describe a simple, unsupervised neural network algorithm that also uses this natural structure. Using only the co-occurring patterns of lip motion and sound signals from a human speaker, the network learns separate visual and auditory speech classifiers that perform comparably to supervised networks.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Long-term depression of excitatory synaptic transmission and its relationship to long-term potentiationPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- The discovery of structure by multi-stream networks of local processors with contextual guidanceNetwork: Computation in Neural Systems, 1995
- Discovering Predictable ClassificationsNeural Computation, 1993
- Extraretinal representations in area V4 in the macaque monkeyVisual Neuroscience, 1991
- Neural network models of sensory integration for improved vowel recognitionProceedings of the IEEE, 1990
- Self-organized formation of topologically correct feature mapsBiological Cybernetics, 1982
- Visual influences on speech perception processesPerception & Psychophysics, 1978
- Hearing lips and seeing voicesNature, 1976
- A Stochastic Approximation MethodThe Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 1951
- The experimental development of color-tone synesthesia.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1944