If perception organizes, what does the brain do?
— Mww
It's the brain that's doing it. Perception is a brain function. — Kenosha Kid
No, this is a misrepresentation. Kenosha Kid is not suggesting that we're 'looking' at images of flowers, the 'looking' is the name we give to the entire process. What @Kenosha Kid is referring to is our responses. Speech, action, emotional responses, strategies, and more complex mental reactions. These all result from the perception of the flower, not the flower. — Isaac
It escapes me completely, how sensory receptor stimuli perception in my skin, can be construed as a brain function in my head. — Mww
I have aphantasia — Dawnstorm
It feels like I'm aware of what's going on in my head in somewhat the same way that I'm aware there are platypuses in Australia. External stuff experienced in the past; no situationally present trigger or connection. If I apply neuroscientific knowledge to myself then I objectify myself, and it's all theoretic. — Dawnstorm
When you say decode, do you mean with loss? If so, what would be lost? — fdrake
Then I say, but there's a difference between me passively seeing something I cannot help but see on the one hand, and me either actively conjecturing or remembering by association some facts about what I see. And then I think you say that that's all we're doing anyway when constructing these representations. — Kenosha Kid
whatever I'm seeing _seems_ to come to me fully formed. It doesn't seem like it would benefit from deliberation. — Kenosha Kid
efficiency I would imagine. It's much better for me to make decisions based on integrated, annotated, coloured-in if you will information. Same reason we do feature extraction and dimensionality reduction as part of preprocessing for training and using neural nets. Having to consciously parse raw data would render consciousness too slow to be useful. — Kenosha Kid
I wouldn't call actual excitement of nerves in the skin perception, — Kenosha Kid
Different senses have different kinds of receptors, so what name covers them all, if not perception? — Mww
Like I said before, third-person perspectives are simulated first-person perspectives. So if you are going to assert that the first-person perspective is an illusion, then you've just undermined all of your third-person perspectives and knowledge you've acquired by them - which is everything you know — Harry Hindu
My contention was that there are good reasons to talk of properties of experience as opposed to objects because they're not the same. — Kenosha Kid
it is hard to understand how one can motivate a general skepticism about perceptual experience on the basis of neuroscientific findings, since the latter – to some extent at least – presuppose the validity of the former — Joshs
Not something I'm familiar with, I'm afraid. I will look it up. — Isaac
I don't think anyone moves from scientific findings to global skepticism. Common sense tells you that a representational scheme is vulnerable to skepticism — frank
This is where things are currently at
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/biorxiv/early/2017/12/30/240317.full.pdf
We need a kind of AI to 'learn' the translation as we go, without this in between step, there's nothing... yet. — Isaac
For the subjective assessment, we conducted a behavioral experiment with another group of 9 raters (4 females and 5 males, aged between 19 and 36 years). On each trial of the experiment, the raters viewed a display presenting a reconstructed image (at the bottom) and two candidate images (at the top; its original image and a randomly selected image), and were asked to select the image similar to the one presented at the bottom from the two candidates. Each trial continued until the raters made a response. For both types of assessments, the proportion of trials, in which the original image was selected as more similar one was calculated as a quality measure.
In both objective and subjective assessments, each reconstructed image was tested with
all pairs of the images among the same types of images (natural-images,
geometric-shapes, and alphabetical-letters for images from the image presentation
sessions, and natural-images and geometric-shapes for images from the imagery
session ; e.g., for the test natural-images, one of the 50 reconstructions was tested with
49 pairs consisted of one original image and another image from the rest of 49, resulting
in 50 × 49 = 2,450 comparisons).
For test datasets, fMRI samples corresponding to the same stimulus or imagery were
averaged across trials to increase the signal-to-noise ratio of the fMRI signals. To
compensate for a possible difference of the signal-to-noise ratio between training and
test samples, the decoded features of individual DNN layers were normalized by
multiplying a single scalar so that the norm of the decoded vectors of individual DNN
layers matched with the mean norm of the true DNN feature vectors computed from
independent 10,000 natural images. Then, this norm-corrected vector was subsequently
provided to the reconstruction algorithm. See Supplementary Methods for details of the
norm-correction procedure.
at an image constructed by the visual cortex. — Banno
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