@inbook {IOPORT.05845195, author = {Wagatsuma, Nobuhiko and Sakai, Ko}, title = {Roles of early vision for the dynamics of border-ownership selective neurons.}, year = {2010}, booktitle = {Neural information processing. Theory and algorithms. 17th international conference, ICONIP 2010, Sydney, Australia, November 22--25, 2010. Proceedings, Part I}, isbn = {978-3-642-17536-7}, pages = {99-106}, publisher = {Berlin: Springer}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-17537-4_13}, abstract = {Summary: The border ownership (BO) that indicates which side of the contour owns the border plays a fundamental role in object perception[1]. The responses of BO-selective cells exhibit rapid transition when a stimulus is fliped along its classical receptive field so that the opposite BO is presented, while the transition is significantly slower when a clear BO is turned into an ambiguous edge such as when a square is enlarged extensively[2]. This phenomenon appears to be a crucial clue for understanding the neural mechanims underlying the credibility of BO. We hypothesize that dynamics of BO-selective cells and networks behind them play a crucial role in the credibility, and that the credibility is related to early visual areas as an appearance of a salient object evokes bottom-up attention. To investigate these hypotheses, we examined the dynamics of BO-selective cells with a computational model that include recurent pathways among V1, V2 and Posterior Parietal (PP) areas[3]. The model cells have been shown to reproduce effects of spatial attention. Simulations of the model exhibited distinct response time depending on the ambiguity of BO, indicating a crucial role of dynamics in the credibility. The recurrent network between PP and V1 appear to play a crucial role for the time course of BO-selective cells that governs simultaneously both credibility of BO and bottom-up attention.}, identifier = {05845195}, }