The thalamus is the major gate to the cortex and its
control over cortical responses is well established.
Cortical feedback to the thalamus is, in turn, the anatomically
dominant input to relay cells, yet its influence on thalamic
processing has been difficult to interpret. For an understanding
of complex sensory processing, detailed concepts of the
corticothalamic interplay need yet to be established. Drawing
on various physiological and anatomical data, we elaborate
the novel hypothesis that the visual cortex controls the
spatiotemporal structure of cortical receptive fields via
feedback to the lateral geniculate nucleus. Furthermore,
we present and analyze a model of corticogeniculate loops
that implements this control, and exhibit its ability of
object segmentation by statistical motion analysis in the
visual field.