Canonical coordinates for retino-cortical magnification (Q2345037): Difference between revisions

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Property / author: Luc M. J. Florack / rank
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Property / author: Luc M. J. Florack / rank
 
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Property / full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.3390/axioms3010070 / rank
 
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Property / OpenAlex ID: W2117859351 / rank
 
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Property / cites work: The structure of images / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Representation of local geometry in the visual system / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Operational significance of receptive field assemblies / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Receptive field families / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Linear scale-space has first been proposed in Japan / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Scale-time / rank
 
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Latest revision as of 02:00, 10 July 2024

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Canonical coordinates for retino-cortical magnification
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    Canonical coordinates for retino-cortical magnification (English)
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    19 May 2015
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    Summary: A geometric model for a biologically-inspired visual front-end is proposed, based on an isotropic, scale-invariant two-form field. The model incorporates a foveal property typical of biological visual systems, with an approximately linear decrease of resolution as a function of eccentricity, and by a physical size constant that measures the radius of the geometric foveola, the central region characterized by maximal resolving power. It admits a description in singularity-free canonical coordinates generalizing the familiar log-polar coordinates and reducing to these in the asymptotic case of negligibly-sized geometric foveola or, equivalently, at peripheral locations in the visual field. It has predictive power to the extent that quantitative geometric relationships pertaining to retino-cortical magnification along the primary visual pathway, such as receptive field size distribution and spatial arrangement in retina and striate cortex, can be deduced in a principled manner. The biological plausibility of the model is demonstrated by comparison with known facts of human vision.
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    foveal vision
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    retino-cortical magnification
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    resolution
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    log-polar coordinates
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