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KF5JRV > TECH     19.07.16 12:40l 42 Lines 2585 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: Artificial Neural Networks
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Sent: 160719/1130Z 6290@KF5JRV.#NWAR.AR.USA.NA BPQK1.4.65

 The Inspiration for Artificial Neural Networks, Building Blocks of Deep 
 Learning 1959

In 1959 Harvard neurophysiologists David H. Hubel and Torsten Wiesel, inserted 
a microelectrode into the primary visual cortex of an anesthetized cat. They 
then projected patterns of light and dark on a screen in front of the cat, and 
found that some neurons fired rapidly when presented with lines at one angle, 
while others responded best to another angle. They called these neurons 
"simple cells." Still other neurons, which they termed "complex cells," 
responded best to lines of a certain angle moving in one direction. These 
studies showed how the visual system builds an image from simple stimuli into 
more complex representations. Many artificial neural networks, fundamental 
components of deep learning, may be viewed as cascading models of cell types 
inspired by Hubel and Wiesel's observations.

For two later contributions Hubel and Wiesel shared the 1981 Nobel Prize in 
Physiologist or Medicine with Roger W. Sperry.

". . . firstly, their work on development of the visual system, which involved 
a description of ocular dominance columns in the 1960s and 1970s; and 
secondly, their work establishing a foundation for visual neurophysiology, 
describing how signals from the eye are processed by the brain to generate 
edge detectors, motion detectors, stereoscopic depth detectors and color 
detectors, building blocks of the visual scene. By depriving kittens from 
using one eye, they showed that columns in the primary visual cortex receiving 
inputs from the other eye took over the areas that would normally receive 
input from the deprived eye. This has important implications for the 
understanding of deprivation amblyopia, a type of visual loss due to 
unilateral visual deprivation during the so-called critical period. These 
kittens also did not develop areas receiving input from both eyes, a feature 
needed for binocular vision. Hubel and Wiesel's experiments showed that the 
ocular dominance develops irreversibly early in childhood development. These 
studies opened the door for the understanding and treatment of childhood 
cataracts and strabismus. They were also important in the study of cortical 
plasticity.

"Furthermore, the understanding of sensory processing in animals served as 
inspiration for the SIFT descriptor (Lowe, 1999), which is a local feature 
used in computer vision for tasks such as object recognition and wide-baseline 
matching, etc. The SIFT descriptor is arguably the most widely used feature 
type for these tasks". 


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