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Evolution and Optimality of Similar Neural Mechanisms for Perception and Action during Search

Sheng Zhang and Miguel P Eckstein

PLOS Computational Biology, 2010, vol. 6, issue 9, 1-11

Abstract: A prevailing theory proposes that the brain's two visual pathways, the ventral and dorsal, lead to differing visual processing and world representations for conscious perception than those for action. Others have claimed that perception and action share much of their visual processing. But which of these two neural architectures is favored by evolution? Successful visual search is life-critical and here we investigate the evolution and optimality of neural mechanisms mediating perception and eye movement actions for visual search in natural images. We implement an approximation to the ideal Bayesian searcher with two separate processing streams, one controlling the eye movements and the other stream determining the perceptual search decisions. We virtually evolved the neural mechanisms of the searchers' two separate pathways built from linear combinations of primary visual cortex receptive fields (V1) by making the simulated individuals' probability of survival depend on the perceptual accuracy finding targets in cluttered backgrounds. We find that for a variety of targets, backgrounds, and dependence of target detectability on retinal eccentricity, the mechanisms of the searchers' two processing streams converge to similar representations showing that mismatches in the mechanisms for perception and eye movements lead to suboptimal search. Three exceptions which resulted in partial or no convergence were a case of an organism for which the targets are equally detectable across the retina, an organism with sufficient time to foveate all possible target locations, and a strict two-pathway model with no interconnections and differential pre-filtering based on parvocellular and magnocellular lateral geniculate cell properties. Thus, similar neural mechanisms for perception and eye movement actions during search are optimal and should be expected from the effects of natural selection on an organism with limited time to search for food that is not equi-detectable across its retina and interconnected perception and action neural pathways.Author Summary: The brain has two processing pathways of visual information, the ventral and dorsal streams. A prevailing theory proposes that this division leads to different world representations for conscious perception than those for actions such as grasping or eye movements. Perceptual tasks such as searching for our car keys in a living room requires the brain to coordinate eye movement actions to point the high resolution center of the eye, the fovea, to regions of interest in the scene to extract information used for a subsequent decision, such as identifying or localizing the keys. Does having different neural representations of the world for eye movement actions and perception have any costs for performance during visual search? We use computer vision algorithms that simulate components of the human visual system with the two separate processing streams and search for simple targets added to thousands of natural images. We simulate the process of evolution to show that the neural mechanisms of the perception and action processing streams co-evolve similar representations of the target suggesting that discrepancies in the neural representations of the world for perception and eye movements lead to lower visual search performance and are not favored by evolution.

Date: 2010
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pcbi00:1000930

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000930

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