Spaces in the Brain: From Neurons to Meanings

Front Psychol. 2016 Nov 22:7:1820. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01820. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

Spaces in the brain can refer either to psychological spaces, which are derived from similarity judgments, or to neurocognitive spaces, which are based on the activities of neural structures. We want to show how psychological spaces naturally emerge from the underlying neural spaces by dimension reductions that preserve similarity structures and the relevant categorizations. Some neuronal representational formats that may generate the psychological spaces are presented, compared, and discussed in relation to the mathematical principles of monotonicity, continuity, and convexity. In particular, we discuss the spatial structures involved in the connections between perception and action, for example eye-hand coordination, and argue that spatial organization of information makes such mappings more efficient.

Keywords: chorus transform; conceptual spaces; eye–hand coordination; population coding; radial basis function; similarity; stimulus generalization.

Publication types

  • Review