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High-level visual prediction errors in early visual cortex

Psychology

High-level visual prediction errors in early visual cortex

D. Richter, T. C. Kietzmann, et al.

Perception reflects both sensory input and expectations. Using fMRI and deep neural network models, this study shows that surprising signals originate at high levels of the visual hierarchy and are broadcast back to earlier visual areas, suggesting high-level predictions constrain early sensory processing — research conducted by David Richter, Tim C. Kietzmann, and Floris P. de Lange.... show more
Abstract
Perception is shaped by both incoming sensory input and expectations derived from our prior knowledge. Numerous studies have shown stronger neural activity for surprising inputs, suggestive of predictive processing. However, it is largely unclear what predictions are made across the cortical hierarchy, and therefore what kind of surprise drives this up-regulation of activity. Here, we leveraged fMRI in human volunteers and deep neural net-work (DNN) models to arbitrate between 2 hypotheses: prediction errors may signal a local mismatch between input and expectation at each level of the cortical hierarchy, or prediction errors may be computed at higher levels and the resulting surprise signal is broadcast to earlier areas in the cortical hierarchy. Our results align with the latter hypothesis. Prediction errors in both low- and high-level visual cortex responded to high-level, but not low-level, visual surprise. This scaling with high-level surprise in early visual cortex strongly diverged from feedforward tuning. Combined, our results suggest that high-level predictions constrain sensory processing in earlier areas, thereby aiding perceptual inference.
Publisher
PLOS Biology
Published On
Nov 11, 2024
Authors
David Richter, Tim C. Kietzmann, Floris P. de Lange
Tags
predictive processing
prediction error
high-level surprise
visual cortex
fMRI
deep neural networks
cortical hierarchy
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