
Hans-Lukas Teuber Memorial Lecture: Reverse engineering human visual intelligence
Description
Understanding the mechanisms underlying visual intelligence requires the combined efforts of brain science (neuroscience and cognitive science), and forward engineering aimed at in silico emulation of intelligent behavior (“AI engineering”). This combined, iterative approach, termed “reverse engineering,” has produced remarkable progress in new models of primate vision. Specifically, a family of in silico deep neural network architectures (ANNs) was derived in large part from measurements of the mammalian neural network for object vision — the ventral visual stream, and was combined with engineering advances applied to this ANN family to optimize visual task performance. We and others have shown that this approach produces specific ANNs whose internal “neurons” are surprisingly accurate models of individual ventral stream neurons at the spiking level, and models of this type now underlie many artificial vision technologies. In addition, we find that these in silico models give vision scientists a new superpower — the ability to design patterns of light energy on the retina (i.e. images) that successfully control precise patterns of neuronal spiking activity deep in the brain.
Importantly, the reverse engineering virtuous loop — respectable ANN models to new ventral stream experimental data to even better ANN models (that enable better applications) — is starting to accelerate. My talk will review and discuss this virtuous loop: experimental benchmarks for in silico ventral streams, key deviations from the biological ventral stream revealed by those benchmarks, and newer in silico ventral streams that partly close those differences. I will conclude by motivating a discussion: Where is this approach leading us? Are these in silico models an “understanding” of (some aspects of) visual intelligence? What is the role of human intuition in building the next in silico models? Which other areas in the brain and cognitive sciences are poised for a similar approach?
Speaker Bio
Dr. Jim DiCarlo is Department Head and Peter de Florez Professor of Neuroscience in the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and an Investigator at the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT. He earned his Ph.D. in biomedical engineering and M.D. from The Johns Hopkins University in 1998, and did his postdoctoral training in primate visual neurophysiology at Baylor College of Medicine. He joined the MIT faculty in 2002 and was awarded tenure in 2009. He is an Alfred Sloan Fellow, a Pew Scholar in the Biomedical Sciences, and a McKnight Scholar in Neuroscience. His group is currently using a combination of large-scale neurophysiology, brain imaging, optogenetic methods, and high-throughput computational simulations to understand the neuronal mechanisms and fundamental cortical computations that underlie the construction of these powerful image representations. They aim to use this understanding to inspire and develop new machine vision systems, to provide a basis for new neural prosthetics (brain-machine interfaces) to restore or augment lost senses, and to provide a foundation upon which the community can understand how high-level visual representation is altered in human conditions such as agnosia, autism, and dyslexia.
Additional Info
The Hans-Lukas Teuber Memorial Lecture is made possible by the Robert K. Yin Fund, established in 1998 by Robert K. Yin (BCS Ph.D. 1970), founder and president of Cosmos Corporation. Dr. Yin wished to commemorate the department's founder and first chairman, whose vision continues to inspire and inform the department's work. Dr. Teuber was also a consensus builder and a great teacher—attributes that are celebrated in this lecture series. Speakers include distinguished members from the neuroscience and cognitive science community, who are selected by a small group of graduate students in conjunction with a faculty member.