NCNEJun 12, 2014

Deep Neural Networks Rival the Representation of Primate IT Cortex for Core Visual Object Recognition

arXiv:1406.3284v1829 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the fundamental question of whether artificial neural networks can match biological visual systems, with implications for neuroscience and AI, though it is incremental in refining comparison metrics.

The study tackled the problem of comparing the representational performance of deep neural networks (DNNs) to the primate inferior temporal (IT) cortex for core visual object recognition, and found that the latest DNNs rival IT cortex performance, with models showing high representational similarity and predictive accuracy for individual neural responses.

The primate visual system achieves remarkable visual object recognition performance even in brief presentations and under changes to object exemplar, geometric transformations, and background variation (a.k.a. core visual object recognition). This remarkable performance is mediated by the representation formed in inferior temporal (IT) cortex. In parallel, recent advances in machine learning have led to ever higher performing models of object recognition using artificial deep neural networks (DNNs). It remains unclear, however, whether the representational performance of DNNs rivals that of the brain. To accurately produce such a comparison, a major difficulty has been a unifying metric that accounts for experimental limitations such as the amount of noise, the number of neural recording sites, and the number trials, and computational limitations such as the complexity of the decoding classifier and the number of classifier training examples. In this work we perform a direct comparison that corrects for these experimental limitations and computational considerations. As part of our methodology, we propose an extension of "kernel analysis" that measures the generalization accuracy as a function of representational complexity. Our evaluations show that, unlike previous bio-inspired models, the latest DNNs rival the representational performance of IT cortex on this visual object recognition task. Furthermore, we show that models that perform well on measures of representational performance also perform well on measures of representational similarity to IT and on measures of predicting individual IT multi-unit responses. Whether these DNNs rely on computational mechanisms similar to the primate visual system is yet to be determined, but, unlike all previous bio-inspired models, that possibility cannot be ruled out merely on representational performance grounds.

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