ScienceDirect® Home Skip Main Navigation Links
You have guest access to ScienceDirect. Find out more.
 
Home
Browse
My Settings
Alerts
Help
 Quick Search
 Search tips (Opens new window)
    Clear all fields    
Neural Networks
Volume 15, Issue 1, January 2002, Pages 41-55
 
Font Size: Decrease Font Size  Increase Font Size
 Abstract - selected
Purchase PDF (268 K)

Article Toolbox
 
 
 
Related Articles in ScienceDirect
View More Related Articles
 
View Record in Scopus
 
doi:10.1016/S0893-6080(01)00126-5    
How to Cite or Link Using DOI (Opens New Window)

Copyright © 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

Contributed article

Attention modulation of neural tuning through peak and base rate in correlated firing

Purchase the full-text article



References and further reading may be available for this article. To view references and further reading you must purchase this article.

H. NakaharaCorresponding Author Contact Information, E-mail The Corresponding Author and S. -I. Amari

Laboratory for Mathematical Neuroscience, RIKEN Brain Science Institute 2-1 Hirosawa, Wako, Saitama 351-0198, Japan


Received 1 February 2001;
revised 20 August 2001;
accepted 20 August 2001
Available online 15 October 2001.

Abstract

The present study investigates the influence of attention modulation on neural tuning functions under a Gaussian correlation structure. Recent experiments have shown that attention modulates the tuning curve via its height and base rate. Inspired by this experimental finding, we previously showed the effective size of attention modulation (i.e. the critical length) on the neural population that enhances encoding accuracy. The previous result, however, was obtained under the assumption of uncorrelated firing, i.e. stimulus-conditional independence of neural responses. A question still remains whether the above findings can be applied to correlated firing. It is important to investigate this issue partly because neural firings are usually correlated but even more so because common attentional inputs may cause correlated firings. The present study first provides the general framework of attention modulation in relation to an attended stimulus and an actual stimulus and then shows the existence of a critical length under a Gaussian correlation structure. In order to improve encoding accuracy, measured by the Fisher information, the height and the base rate should be increased when the attended stimulus is in the critical length from the peak of the tuning curve and decreased otherwise. Furthermore, we confirm that a similar nature of the critical length also holds even when the neural decoder uses an uncorrelated unfaithful model. Thus, the existence of the critical length seems to be a ubiquitous phenomenon in attention modulation, and so its implications are discussed.

Author Keywords: Attention; Fisher information; Encoding accuracy; Unfaithful model; Correlated firing; Multiplicative response

Corresponding Author Contact Information Corresponding author. Tel.: +81-484-679-663; fax: +81-484-679-693; email: hiro@brain.riken.go.jp


Neural Networks
Volume 15, Issue 1, January 2002, Pages 41-55
 
Home
Browse
My Settings
Alerts
Help
Elsevier.com (Opens new window)
About ScienceDirect  |  Contact Us  |  Information for Advertisers  |  Terms & Conditions  |  Privacy Policy
Copyright © 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. ScienceDirect® is a registered trademark of Elsevier B.V.