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Mon Jun 5 16:42:55 EDT 2006
it appears that in neuroscience an important theme on the binding
problem (how sensory features are bound together to form a coherent
percept) has emerged from his theory. The theory has also started to
impact the field of perceptual psychology (e.g. see a Nature paper by
M. Usher and N. Donnelly, recently announced on this list).
The issue of binding is so fundamental that the final judgement on von
der Malsburg's theory is unlikely to be available in the near
future. But one would not dispute that his neural network theory has
generated major impact on neuroscience.
DeLiang Wang
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C. von der Malsburg (1981): "The correlatoin theory of brain function,"
Internal Report 81-2. Max-Planck-Institute for Biophysical Chemistry,
Gottingen.
P. Milner (1974): "A model for visual shape recognition," Psychological
Review, 81, pp. 521-535.
R. Eckhorn et al. (1988): "Coherent oscillations: A mechanism of feature
linking in the visual cortex," Biological Cybernetics, 60, pp. 121-130.
C. Gray, P. Konig, A. Engel, and W. Singer (1989): "Oscillatory
responses
in cat visual cortex exhibit inter-columnar synchronization which
reflects
global stimulus properties," Nature, 338, pp. 334-337.
W. Phillips and W. Singer (1997), "In search of common foundations for
cortical computation," Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 20, pp. 657-722.
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