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As discussed in chapter 2, neurons in the primary visual
cortex are selective for the orientation and position of
stimuli. Furthermore, the neurons are arranged retinotopically across
the cortex, forming an orientation map
(Blasdel and Salama, 1986; Blasdel, 1992a; Grinvald et al., 1994; Ts'o et al., 1990; Weliky and Kandler, 1995).
Each local area in the map contains neurons with each possible
orientation preference, all responding to the same location on the
retina. The neurons tuned to a particular orientation are activated
when an input of that orientation is present at their preferred
location on the retina.
It has been shown previously that, given oriented inputs, the
RF-LISSOM model develops orientation maps similar to those seen in the
primary visual cortex (Miikkulainen et al. 1997;
Sirosh and Miikkulainen 1997; Sirosh et al. 1996).
In this thesis, the functional aspects of such self-organized
orientation maps will be studied. This chapter describes the process
of organizing and characterizing an orientation map, and
chapter 5 will examine how the behavior of the map leads
to tilt aftereffects.
James A. Bednar
9/19/1997