A Model of Feedback to the Lateral Geniculate Nucleus
–Neural Information Processing Systems
Simplified models of the lateral geniculate nucles (LGN) and striate cortexillustrate the possibility that feedback to the LG N may be used for robust, low-level pattern analysis. The information fed back to the LG N is rebroadcast to cortex using the LG N's full fan-out, so the cortex-LGN-cortex pathway mediates extensive cortico-cortical communication while keeping the number of necessary connectionssmall. 1 INTRODUCTION The lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) in the thalamus is often considered as just a relay station on the way from the retina to visual cortex, since receptive field properties ofneurons in the LGN are very similar to retinal ganglion cell receptive field properties. However, there is a massive projection from cortex back to the LGN: it is estimated that 3-4 times more synapses in the LG N are due to corticogeniculate connectionsthan those due to retinogeniculate connections [12]. This suggests some important processing role for the LGN, but the nature of the computation performed has remained far from clear. I will first briefly summarize some anatomical facts and physiological results concerning thecorticogeniculate loop, and then present a simplified model in which its function is to (usefully) mediate communication between cortical cells.
Neural Information Processing Systems
Dec-31-1993
- Country:
- North America > United States > California (0.14)
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Neurology (0.54)
- Technology: