A Survey of Architecture and Function of the Primary Visual Cortex (V1)

The largest visual area, known as the primary visual cortex or V1, has greatly contributed to the current understanding of mammalian and human visual pathways and their role in visual perception. The initial discovery of orientation-sensitive neurons in V1, arranged according to a retinotopic mappin...

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Main Authors: Li Zhaoping, Anil A. Bharath, Jeffrey Ng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2007-01-01
Series:EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2007/97961
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spelling doaj-bb396629ac8e4965b03e4d29e37f8ef82020-11-24T23:51:18ZengSpringerOpenEURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing1687-61721687-61802007-01-01200710.1155/2007/97961A Survey of Architecture and Function of the Primary Visual Cortex (V1)Li ZhaopingAnil A. BharathJeffrey NgThe largest visual area, known as the primary visual cortex or V1, has greatly contributed to the current understanding of mammalian and human visual pathways and their role in visual perception. The initial discovery of orientation-sensitive neurons in V1, arranged according to a retinotopic mapping, suggested an analogy to its function as a low-level feature analyzer. Subsequent discoveries of phase, spatial frequency, color, ocular origin, and direction-of-motion-sensitive neurons, arranged into overlapping maps, further lent support to the view that it performs a rich decomposition, similar to signal processing transforms, of the retinal output. Like the other cortical areas, V1 has a laminar organization with specialization for input from the relayed retinal afferents, output to the higher visual areas, and the segregation of the magno (motion) and parvo (form) pathways. Spatially lateral connections that exist between neurons of similar and varying properties have also been proposed to give rise to a computation of a bottom-up saliency map in V1. We provide a review of the selectivity of neurons in V1, laminar specialization and analogies to signal processing techniques, a model of V1 saliency computation, and higher-area feedback that may mediate perception. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2007/97961
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Li Zhaoping
Anil A. Bharath
Jeffrey Ng
spellingShingle Li Zhaoping
Anil A. Bharath
Jeffrey Ng
A Survey of Architecture and Function of the Primary Visual Cortex (V1)
EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing
author_facet Li Zhaoping
Anil A. Bharath
Jeffrey Ng
author_sort Li Zhaoping
title A Survey of Architecture and Function of the Primary Visual Cortex (V1)
title_short A Survey of Architecture and Function of the Primary Visual Cortex (V1)
title_full A Survey of Architecture and Function of the Primary Visual Cortex (V1)
title_fullStr A Survey of Architecture and Function of the Primary Visual Cortex (V1)
title_full_unstemmed A Survey of Architecture and Function of the Primary Visual Cortex (V1)
title_sort survey of architecture and function of the primary visual cortex (v1)
publisher SpringerOpen
series EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing
issn 1687-6172
1687-6180
publishDate 2007-01-01
description The largest visual area, known as the primary visual cortex or V1, has greatly contributed to the current understanding of mammalian and human visual pathways and their role in visual perception. The initial discovery of orientation-sensitive neurons in V1, arranged according to a retinotopic mapping, suggested an analogy to its function as a low-level feature analyzer. Subsequent discoveries of phase, spatial frequency, color, ocular origin, and direction-of-motion-sensitive neurons, arranged into overlapping maps, further lent support to the view that it performs a rich decomposition, similar to signal processing transforms, of the retinal output. Like the other cortical areas, V1 has a laminar organization with specialization for input from the relayed retinal afferents, output to the higher visual areas, and the segregation of the magno (motion) and parvo (form) pathways. Spatially lateral connections that exist between neurons of similar and varying properties have also been proposed to give rise to a computation of a bottom-up saliency map in V1. We provide a review of the selectivity of neurons in V1, laminar specialization and analogies to signal processing techniques, a model of V1 saliency computation, and higher-area feedback that may mediate perception.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2007/97961
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