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DOI: 10.1038/nrn3136
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

Normalization as a canonical neural computation

Matteo Carandini,David J. Heeger

Normalization (sociology)
Visual cortex
Computation
2011
There is increasing evidence that the brain relies on a set of canonical neural computations, repeating them across brain regions and modalities to apply similar operations to different problems. A promising candidate for such a computation is normalization, in which the responses of neurons are divided by a common factor that typically includes the summed activity of a pool of neurons. Normalization was developed to explain responses in the primary visual cortex and is now thought to operate throughout the visual system, and in many other sensory modalities and brain regions. Normalization may underlie operations such as the representation of odours, the modulatory effects of visual attention, the encoding of value and the integration of multisensory information. Its presence in such a diversity of neural systems in multiple species, from invertebrates to mammals, suggests that it serves as a canonical neural computation.
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    Normalization as a canonical neural computation” is a paper by Matteo Carandini David J. Heeger published in 2011. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.