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Seminario "Breaking the limits of the standard model of vision"

Assistants
Seminarios del Master in Deep Learning for Audio and Visual Signal Processing
Speaker
Dr. Marcelo Bertalmío
Home institution
Instituto de Óptica del CSIC, Madrid
Date
18-03-2025
Time
16:00h
Place
Aula 4, Escuela Politécnica Superior, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
Description

Abstract: The fields of vision science, brain modeling and machine learning with artificial neural networks (ANNs) share the same standard model (SM) abstraction, where we try to represent arbitrarily complex processes as cascades of linear filters and nonlinearities. But despite all their successes, these disciplines also share a fundamental weakness: for some basic phenomena the existing models fail unless they change with the input, but it isn’t known how to make the models self-adaptive to arbitrary inputs. The main reason behind these failures is that the SM was originated as a simplified model for single neurons that, time has shown, was ignoring biological properties that we now know are fundamental to be able to predict neural responses. Through our work developing color and contrast enhancement algorithms based on visual perception, we were able to make an interesting connection between image processing and computational neuroscience. This led us to propose the intrinsically nonlinear receptive field (INRF) formulation, a neural summation model that, unlike the SM, considers the nonlinear, dynamic and input-dependent nature of dendritic computations. We will present a number of results showing that: (1) vision models based on INRF are able to explain experimental data from visual perception and visual neuroscience that remain a challenge for the SM; (2) ANNs with INRF elements have very important advantages over their SM counterparts: they learn faster, need less training data and are more robust to input perturbations. Therefore, we believe that INRF opens up opportunities for vision science and machine learning research as a new building block with which to replace the linear-nonlinear elements of the SM and produce models that are more accurate, stable and easier to train.

Dr. Marcelo Bertalmío is a Research Scientist at the CSIC Institute of Optics in Madrid, and his interests lie in the development of new vision models. He has written books on image processing and visual perception models, and coordinated several European research projects focused on the audiovisual industry. https://www.io.csic.es/marcelo-bertalmio/

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