Doubly Distributional Population Codes: Simultaneous Representation of Uncertainty and Multiplicity
Open Access
- 1 October 2003
- journal article
- Published by MIT Press in Neural Computation
- Vol. 15 (10) , 2255-2279
- https://doi.org/10.1162/089976603322362356
Abstract
Perceptual inference fundamentally involves uncertainty, arising from noise in sensation and the ill-posed nature of many perceptual problems. Accurate perception requires that this uncertainty be correctly represented, manipulated, and learned about. The choicessubjects makein various psychophysical experiments suggest that they do indeed take such uncertainty into account when making perceptual inferences, posing the question as to how uncertainty is represented in the activities of neuronal populations. Most theoretical investigations of population coding have ignored this issue altogether; the few existing proposals that address it do so in such a way that it is fatally conflated with another facet of perceptual problems that also needs correct handling: multiplicity (that is, the simultaneous presence of multiple distinct stimuli). We present and validate a more powerful proposal for the way that population activity may encode uncertainty, both distinctly from and simultaneously with multiplicity.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- The optic tectum controls visually guided adaptive plasticity in the owl's auditory space mapNature, 2002
- Representational Accuracy of Stochastic Neural PopulationsNeural Computation, 2002
- Humans integrate visual and haptic information in a statistically optimal fashionNature, 2002
- Neural Basis of Hearing in Real-World SituationsAnnual Review of Psychology, 2000
- Narrow Versus Wide Tuning Curves: What's Best for a Population Code?Neural Computation, 1999
- Neuronal Tuning: To Sharpen or Broaden?Neural Computation, 1999
- A formal theory of feature binding in object perception.Psychological Review, 1996
- Neuronal Population Coding of Movement DirectionScience, 1986
- Perceptual Organization in Multistable Apparent MotionPerception, 1985
- Determining optical flowArtificial Intelligence, 1981