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. 2012 Apr 25;6:26. doi: 10.3389/fnsys.2012.00026

Figure 12.

Figure 12

Example of how the results from the grating stimulus can be generalized to other types of stimuli. (A) A visual dot moves in an oscillating manner across space. In the beginning the error coding is high since the movement is new to the network. As the oscillation is repeated it is expected that the network may recognize the stimulus. The error signal decreases. The stimulus is represented if the network can recognize and predict the stimulus. (B) The same stimulus trajectory as in A, but with a low contrast dot.