June 26, Tuesday
12:00 – 13:00
A CS colloquium going wild: On "cortical vision" without visual cortex
Computer Science seminar
Lecturer : Prof. Ohad Ben-Shahar
Affiliation : CS, BGU
Location : 202/37
Host : Dr. Aryeh Kontorovich
Our visual attention is attracted by salient stimuli in our
environment and affected by primitive features such as orientation, color, and motion.
Perceptual saliency due to orientation contrast has been extensively
demonstrated in behavioral experiments with humans and other primates
and is commonly explained by the very particular functional
organization of the primary visual cortex. We challenge this
prevailing view by studying orientation-based visual saliency in two
non-mammalian species with enormous evolutionary distance to humans.
The surprising results not only imply the need to reestablish our
understanding of how these processes work at the neural level, but
they also suggest that orientation-based saliency has computational
optimality in a wide variety of ecological contexts, and thus
constitutes a universal building block for efficient visual
information processing in general.