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Based on considerable neurophysiological evidence, Roy (2012) proposed the theory that localist representation is widely used in the brain, starting from the lowest levels of processing. Grandmother cells are a special case of localist representation. In this article, I present the theory that grandmother cells are also widely used in the brain. To support the proposed theory, I present neurophysiological evidence and an analysis of the concept of grandmother cells. Konorski (1967) first predicted the existence of grandmother cells (he called them “gnostic” neurons) - single neurons that respond to complex stimuli such as faces, hands, expressions, objects, and so on. The term “grandmother cell” was introduced by Jerry Lettvin in 1969 (Barlow, 1995).
- Roy, Asim (Author)
- W.P. Carey School of Business (Contributor)
Roy, A. (2013). An extension of the localist representation theory: grandmother cells are also widely used in the brain. Frontiers in Psychology, 4. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00300
- 2017-07-13 12:58:32
- 2021-11-01 04:06:36
- 3 years ago