Themes of advanced information processing in the primate brain

AIMS Neurosci. 2020 Oct 15;7(4):373-388. doi: 10.3934/Neuroscience.2020023. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

Here is a review of several empirical examples of information processing that occur in the primate cerebral cortex. These include visual processing, object identification and perception, information encoding, and memory. Also, there is a discussion of the higher scale neural organization, mainly theoretical, which suggests hypotheses on how the brain internally represents objects. Altogether they support the general attributes of the mechanisms of brain computation, such as efficiency, resiliency, data compression, and a modularization of neural function and their pathways. Moreover, the specific neural encoding schemes are expectedly stochastic, abstract and not easily decoded by theoretical or empirical approaches.

Keywords: cerebral cortex; information encoding; perception; primate brain; visual processing.

Publication types

  • Review