Mechanisms of human dynamic object recognition revealed by sequential deep neural networks
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| Publication date | 06-2023 |
| Journal | PLoS Computational Biology |
| Article number | e1011169 |
| Volume | Issue number | 19 | 6 |
| Number of pages | 30 |
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| Abstract |
Humans can quickly recognize objects in a dynamically changing world. This ability is showcased by the fact that observers succeed at recognizing objects in rapidly changing image sequences, at up to 13 ms/image. To date, the mechanisms that govern dynamic object recognition remain poorly understood. Here, we developed deep learning models for dynamic recognition and compared different computational mechanisms, contrasting feedforward and recurrent, single-image and sequential processing as well as different forms of adaptation. We found that only models that integrate images sequentially via lateral recurrence mirrored human performance (N = 36) and were predictive of trial-by-trial responses across image durations (13–80 ms/image). Importantly, models with sequential lateral-recurrent integration also captured how human performance changes as a function of image presentation durations, with models processing images for a few time steps capturing human object recognition at shorter presentation durations and models processing images for more time steps capturing human object recognition at longer presentation durations. Furthermore, augmenting such a recurrent model with adaptation markedly improved dynamic recognition performance and accelerated its representational dynamics, thereby predicting human trial-by-trial responses using fewer processing resources. Together, these findings provide new insights into the mechanisms rendering object recognition so fast and effective in a dynamic visual world.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1011169 |
| Other links | https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85164067368 |
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Mechanisms of human dynamic object recognition revealed by sequential deep neural networks
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