TopicNeuroscience

perceptual biases

Content Overview
4Total items
3ePosters
1Seminar

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

An investigation of perceptual biases in spiking recurrent neural networks trained to discriminate time intervals

Nestor Parga
Autonomous University of Madrid (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid), Spain
Jun 8, 2022

Magnitude estimation and stimulus discrimination tasks are affected by perceptual biases that cause the stimulus parameter to be perceived as shifted toward the mean of its distribution. These biases have been extensively studied in psychophysics and, more recently and to a lesser extent, with neural activity recordings. New computational techniques allow us to train spiking recurrent neural networks on the tasks used in the experiments. This provides us with another valuable tool with which to investigate the network mechanisms responsible for the biases and how behavior could be modeled. As an example, in this talk I will consider networks trained to discriminate the durations of temporal intervals. The trained networks presented the contraction bias, even though they were trained with a stimulus sequence without temporal correlations. The neural activity during the delay period carried information about the stimuli of the current trial and previous trials, this being one of the mechanisms that originated the contraction bias. The population activity described trajectories in a low-dimensional space and their relative locations depended on the prior distribution. The results can be modeled as an ideal observer that during the delay period sees a combination of the current and the previous stimuli. Finally, I will describe how the neural trajectories in state space encode an estimate of the interval duration. The approach could be applied to other cognitive tasks.

ePosterNeuroscience

Inferring the order of stable and context dependent perceptual biases in human vision

Timothy Sheehan, Sunyoung Park, John Serences

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Unraveling perceptual biases: Insights from spiking recurrent neural networks

Luis Serrano-Fernandez, Manuel Beiran, Nestor Parga

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Decisions are guided by learning and perceptual biases in a 2-alternative-forced-choice task

Elena Menichini, Liang Zhou, Victor Pedrosa, Peter Latham, Athena Akrami

perceptual biases coverage

4 items

ePoster3
Seminar1

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