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Computer-based "deep neural network" as good as primates at visual object recognition
• http://www.gizmag.com-Richard MossBut that hasn't stopped neuroscientists and computer scientists from trying over the past 40 years to design computer networks that mimic our visual skills. Recent advances in computing power and deep learning algorithms have accelerated that process to the point where a group of MIT neuroscientists has found a network design that compares favorably to the brain of our primate cousins.
This is important beyond the needs of automated digital information processing like Google's image search. Computer-based neural networks that work like the human brain will further our understanding of how the brain works, and any attempts to create them will test that understanding. Essentially, the fact that these networks work to a level comparable to primates suggests that neuroscientists now have a solid grasp of how object recognition works in the brain.
To see how current networks hold up, the MIT scientists started by testing primates. They implanted arrays of electrodes in the inferior temporal (IT) cortex and area V4 (a part of the visual system that feeds into the IT cortex) of the primates' brains. This allowed them to see how neurons related to object recognition responded when the animals looked at various objects in 1,960 images. (The viewing time per image was a mere 100 milliseconds, which is long enough for humans to recognize an object.)



