Zeki Semir
Laboratory of Neurobiology, Division of Cell & Developmental Biology, University College London, London, UK.
Eur J Neurosci. 2020 Dec;52(12):4684-4694. doi: 10.1111/ejn.14921. Epub 2020 Aug 31.
In this opinion essay, I address the perennial binding problem, that is to say of how independently processed visual attributes such as form, colour and motion are brought together to give us a unified and holistic picture of the visual world. A solution to this central issue in neurobiology remains as elusive as ever. No one knows today how it is implemented. The issue is not a new one and, though discussed most commonly in the context of the visual brain, it is not unique to it either. Karl Lashley summarized it well years ago when he wrote that a critical problem for brain studies is to understand how "the specialized areas of the cerebral cortex interact to provide the integration evident in thought and behaviour" (Lashley, 1931).
在这篇观点文章中,我探讨了长期存在的捆绑问题,也就是说,诸如形状、颜色和运动等独立处理的视觉属性是如何结合在一起,从而为我们提供一个关于视觉世界的统一而整体的画面。神经生物学中这个核心问题的解决方案一如既往地难以捉摸。如今没人知道它是如何实现的。这个问题并非新问题,尽管它最常出现在视觉脑的背景下进行讨论,但也并非视觉脑所独有。卡尔·拉什利多年前对此总结得很好,他写道,大脑研究的一个关键问题是理解“大脑皮层的各个专门区域如何相互作用,以实现思维和行为中明显的整合”(拉什利,1931年)。