•  150
    The link between brain learning, attention, and consciousness
    Consciousness and Cognition 8 (1): 1-44. 1999.
    The processes whereby our brains continue to learn about a changing world in a stable fashion throughout life are proposed to lead to conscious experiences. These processes include the learning of top-down expectations, the matching of these expectations against bottom-up data, the focusing of attention upon the expected clusters of information, and the development of resonant states between bottom-up and top-down processes as they reach an attentive consensus between what is expected and what i…Read more
  •  10
    How does your mind work? How does your brain give rise to your mind? These are questions that all of us have wondered about at some point in our lives, if only because everything that we know is experienced in our minds. They are also very hard questions to answer. After all, how can a mind understand itself? How can you understand something as complex as the tool that is being used to understand it? This book provides an introductory and self-contained description of some of the exciting answer…Read more
  •  156
    The thresholds of human observers detecting line targets improve significantly when the targets are presented in a spatial context of collinear inducing stimuli. This phenomenon is referred to as spatial facilitation, and may reflect the output of long-range interactions between cortical feature detectors. Spatial facilitation has thus far been observed with luminance-defined, achromatic stimuli on achromatic backgrounds. This study compares spatial facilitation with line targets and collinear, …Read more
  •  165
    This article introduces an experimental paradigm to selectively probe the multiple levels of visual processing that influence the formation of object contours, perceptual boundaries, and illusory contours. The experiments test the assumption that, to integrate contour information across space and contrast sign, a spatially short-range filtering process that is sensitive to contrast polarity inputs to a spatially long-range grouping process that pools signals from opposite contrast polarities. Th…Read more
  •  174
    The segregation of image parts into foreground and background is an important aspect of the neural computation of 3D scene perception. To achieve such segregation, the brain needs information about border ownership; that is, the belongingness of a contour to a specific surface represented in the image. This article presents psychophysical data derived from 3D percepts of figure and ground that were generated by presenting 2D images composed of spatially disjoint shapes that pointed inward o…Read more
  •  35
    Principles of cortical synchronization
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (4): 689-690. 1997.
    Functional roles for cortical synchronization in self-organizing neural networks are described. These properties are best understood by models that link brain to behavior. Synchrony can express itself differently in cortical circuits that perform different behavioral tasks. Cortical temporal properties that seem inexplicable by synchrony are also mentioned.
  •  22
    Brain feedback and adaptive resonance in speech perception
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (3): 332-333. 2000.
    The brain contains ubiquitous reciprocal bottom-up and top-down intercortical and thalamocortical pathways. These resonating feedback pathways may be essential for stable learning of speech and language codes and for context-sensitive selection and completion of noisy speech sounds and word groupings. Context-sensitive speech data, notably interword backward effects in time, have been quantitatively modeled using these concepts but not with purely feedforward models.
  •  19
    Neural dynamics of decision making under risk: Affective balance and cognitive-emotional interactions
    with William E. Gutowski
    Psychological Review 94 (3): 300-318. 1987.
  • Adaptative Resonance Theory
    with Gail Carpenter
    In M. Arbib (ed.), The Handbook of Brain Theory and Neural Networks, Mit Press. pp. 87. 2002.
  •  107
    STaRT: A bridge between emotion theory and neurobiology through dynamic system modeling
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (2): 207-208. 2005.
    Lewis proposes a “reconceptualization” of how to link the psychology and neurobiology of emotion and cognitive-emotional interactions. His main proposed themes have actually been actively and quantitatively developed in the neural modeling literature for more than 30 years. This commentary summarizes some of these themes and points to areas of particularly active research in this area.
  •  26
    Neural models of reaching
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (2): 310-310. 1997.
    Plamondon & Alimi (P&A) have unified much data on speed/accuracy trade-offs during reaching movements using a delta-lognormal form factor that describes notably neuromuscular systems. Their approach raises questions about whether a large number of systems is needed, whether they are linear, and whether the results disclose the neural design principles that control reaching behaviors. The authors admit that (sect. 6, para. 4)
  •  16
  •  61
    Linking visual cortex to visual perception: An alternative to the gestalt bubble
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (4): 412-413. 2003.
    Lehar's lively discussion builds on a critique of neural models of vision that is incorrect in its general and specific claims. He espouses a Gestalt perceptual approach rather than one consistent with the “objective neurophysiological state of the visual system” (target article, Abstract). Contemporary vision models realize his perceptual goals and also quantitatively explain neurophysiological and anatomical data.
  •  64
    The Art of Seeing and Painting
    Technical Report. 2006.
    The human urge to represent the three-dimensional world using two-dimensional pictorial representations dates back at least to Paleolithic times. Artists from ancient to modern times have struggled to understand how a few contours or color patches on a flat surface can induce mental representations of a three-dimensional scene. This article summarizes some of the recent breakthroughs in scientifically understanding how the brain sees that shed light on these struggles. These breakthroughs i…Read more
  •  51
  •  860
    Depth perception from pairs of overlapping cues in pictorial displays
    with Birgitta Dresp and Severine Durand
    Spatial Vision 15 255-276. 2002.
    The experiments reported herein probe the visual cortical mechanisms that control near–far percepts in response to two-dimensional stimuli. Figural contrast is found to be a principal factor for the emergence of percepts of near versus far in pictorial stimuli, especially when stimulus duration is brief. Pictorial factors such as interposition (Experiment 1) and partial occlusion Experiments 2 and 3) may cooperate, as generally predicted by cue combination models, or compete with contrast factor…Read more
  •  58
    Localist but distributed representations
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (4): 478-479. 2000.
    A number of examples are given of how localist models may incorporate distributed representations, without the types of nonlocal interactions that often render distributed models implausible. The need to analyze the information that is encoded by these representations is also emphasized as a metatheoretical constraint on model plausibility.
  •  35
    Four frames do not suffice
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 8 (2): 294-295. 1985.