Variance predicts salience in central sensory processing

Author:

Hermundstad Ann M12,Briguglio John J1,Conte Mary M3,Victor Jonathan D3,Balasubramanian Vijay124,Tkačik Gašper5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States

2. Laboratoire de Physique Théorique, École Normale Supérieure, Paris, France

3. Brain and Mind Research Institute, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, United States

4. Initiative for the Theoretical Sciences, City University of New York Graduate Center, New York, United States

5. Institute of Science and Technology Austria, Klosterneuburg, Austria

Abstract

Information processing in the sensory periphery is shaped by natural stimulus statistics. In the periphery, a transmission bottleneck constrains performance; thus efficient coding implies that natural signal components with a predictably wider range should be compressed. In a different regime—when sampling limitations constrain performance—efficient coding implies that more resources should be allocated to informative features that are more variable. We propose that this regime is relevant for sensory cortex when it extracts complex features from limited numbers of sensory samples. To test this prediction, we use central visual processing as a model: we show that visual sensitivity for local multi-point spatial correlations, described by dozens of independently-measured parameters, can be quantitatively predicted from the structure of natural images. This suggests that efficient coding applies centrally, where it extends to higher-order sensory features and operates in a regime in which sensitivity increases with feature variability.

Funder

National Eye Institute

National Science Foundation

Austrian Science Fund

Fondation Pierre Gilles de Gennes

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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