Visual Experiences
visual experiences
NMC4 Short Talk: Hypothesis-neutral response-optimized models of higher-order visual cortex reveal strong semantic selectivity
Modeling neural responses to naturalistic stimuli has been instrumental in advancing our understanding of the visual system. Dominant computational modeling efforts in this direction have been deeply rooted in preconceived hypotheses. In contrast, hypothesis-neutral computational methodologies with minimal apriorism which bring neuroscience data directly to bear on the model development process are likely to be much more flexible and effective in modeling and understanding tuning properties throughout the visual system. In this study, we develop a hypothesis-neutral approach and characterize response selectivity in the human visual cortex exhaustively and systematically via response-optimized deep neural network models. First, we leverage the unprecedented scale and quality of the recently released Natural Scenes Dataset to constrain parametrized neural models of higher-order visual systems and achieve novel predictive precision, in some cases, significantly outperforming the predictive success of state-of-the-art task-optimized models. Next, we ask what kinds of functional properties emerge spontaneously in these response-optimized models? We examine trained networks through structural ( feature visualizations) as well as functional analysis (feature verbalizations) by running `virtual' fMRI experiments on large-scale probe datasets. Strikingly, despite no category-level supervision, since the models are solely optimized for brain response prediction from scratch, the units in the networks after optimization act as detectors for semantic concepts like `faces' or `words', thereby providing one of the strongest evidences for categorical selectivity in these visual areas. The observed selectivity in model neurons raises another question: are the category-selective units simply functioning as detectors for their preferred category or are they a by-product of a non-category-specific visual processing mechanism? To investigate this, we create selective deprivations in the visual diet of these response-optimized networks and study semantic selectivity in the resulting `deprived' networks, thereby also shedding light on the role of specific visual experiences in shaping neuronal tuning. Together with this new class of data-driven models and novel model interpretability techniques, our study illustrates that DNN models of visual cortex need not be conceived as obscure models with limited explanatory power, rather as powerful, unifying tools for probing the nature of representations and computations in the brain.
Nature, nurture and synaptic adhesion in between
Exposure to proper environment during early development is essential for brain maturation. Impaired sensory input or abnormal experiences can have long-term negative consequences on brain health. We seek to define the precise synaptic aberrations caused by abnormal visual experiences early in life, and how these can be remedied through viral, genetic and environmental approaches. Resulting knowledge will contribute to the development of new approaches to mitigate nervous system damage caused by abnormal early life experience.