Explaining the Effect of Likelihood Manipulation and Prior Through a Neural Network of the Audiovisual Perception of Space

Author:

Ursino Mauro1,Cuppini Cristiano1,Magosso Elisa1,Beierholm Ulrik2,Shams Ladan3

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Electrical, Electronic and Information Engineering, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy

2. 2Department of Psychology, Durham University, United Kingdom

3. 3Department of Psychology, Department of BioEngineering, Interdepartmental Neuroscience Program, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

Abstract

Abstract Results in the recent literature suggest that multisensory integration in the brain follows the rules of Bayesian inference. However, how neural circuits can realize such inference and how it can be learned from experience is still the subject of active research. The aim of this work is to use a recent neurocomputational model to investigate how the likelihood and prior can be encoded in synapses, and how they affect audio-visual perception, in a variety of conditions characterized by different experience, different cue reliabilities and temporal asynchrony. The model considers two unisensory networks (auditory and visual) with plastic receptive fields and plastic crossmodal synapses, trained during a learning period. During training visual and auditory stimuli are more frequent and more tuned close to the fovea. Model simulations after training have been performed in crossmodal conditions to assess the auditory and visual perception bias: visual stimuli were positioned at different azimuth (±10° from the fovea) coupled with an auditory stimulus at various audio-visual distances (±20°). The cue reliability has been altered by using visual stimuli with two different contrast levels. Model predictions are compared with behavioral data. Results show that model predictions agree with behavioral data, in a variety of conditions characterized by a different role of prior and likelihood. Finally, the effect of a different unimodal or crossmodal prior, re-learning, temporal correlation among input stimuli, and visual damage (hemianopia) are tested, to reveal the possible use of the model in the clarification of important multisensory problems.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience,Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition,Sensory Systems,Ophthalmology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

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