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1.
J Neurophysiol ; 120(3): 942-952, 2018 09 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29847234

RESUMEN

Neurons in the primary visual cortex respond to oriented stimuli placed in the center of their receptive field, yet their response is modulated by stimuli outside the receptive field (the surround). Classically, this surround modulation is assumed to be strongest if the orientation of the surround stimulus aligns with the neuron's preferred orientation, irrespective of the actual center stimulus. This neuron-dependent surround modulation has been used to explain a wide range of psychophysical phenomena, such as biased tilt perception and saliency of stimuli with contrasting orientation. However, several neurophysiological studies have shown that for most neurons surround modulation is instead center dependent: it is strongest if the surround orientation aligns with the center stimulus. As the impact of such center-dependent modulation on the population level is unknown, we examine this using computational models. We find that with neuron-dependent modulation the biases in orientation coding, commonly used to explain the tilt illusion, are larger than psychophysically reported, but disappear with center-dependent modulation. Therefore we suggest that a mixture of the two modulation types is necessary to quantitatively explain the psychophysically observed biases. Next, we find that under center-dependent modulation average population responses are more sensitive to orientation differences between stimuli, which in theory could improve saliency detection. However, this effect depends on the specific saliency model. Overall, our results thus show that center-dependent modulation reduces coding bias, while possibly increasing the sensitivity to salient features. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Neural responses in the primary visual cortex are modulated by stimuli surrounding the receptive field. Most earlier studies assume this modulation depends on the neuron's tuning properties, but experiments have shown that instead it depends mostly on the stimulus characteristics. We show that this simple change leads to neural coding that is less biased and under some conditions more sensitive to salient features.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Neurológicos , Neuronas/fisiología , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Vías Visuales/fisiología , Humanos , Ilusiones , Estimulación Luminosa , Campos Visuales
2.
Neural Comput ; 30(12): 3168-3188, 2018 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30216141

RESUMEN

Throughout the nervous system, information is commonly coded in activity distributed over populations of neurons. In idealized situations where a single, continuous stimulus is encoded in a homogeneous population code, the value of the encoded stimulus can be read out without bias. However, in many situations, multiple stimuli are simultaneously present; for example, multiple motion patterns might overlap. Here we find that when multiple stimuli that overlap in their neural representation are simultaneously encoded in the population, biases in the read-out emerge. Although the bias disappears in the absence of noise, the bias is remarkably persistent at low noise levels. The bias can be reduced by competitive encoding schemes or by employing complex decoders. To study the origin of the bias, we develop a novel general framework based on gaussian processes that allows an accurate calculation of the estimate distributions of maximum likelihood decoders, and reveals that the distribution of estimates is bimodal for overlapping stimuli. The results have implications for neural coding and behavioral experiments on, for instance, overlapping motion patterns.


Asunto(s)
Encéfalo/fisiología , Modelos Neurológicos , Neuronas/fisiología , Animales , Humanos
3.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jul 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39131368

RESUMEN

In natural circumstances, sensory systems operate in a closed loop with motor output, whereby actions shape subsequent sensory experiences. A prime example of this is the sensorimotor processing required to align one's direction of travel, or heading, with one's goal, a behavior we refer to as steering. In steering, motor outputs work to eliminate errors between the direction of heading and the goal, modifying subsequent errors in the process. The closed-loop nature of the behavior makes it challenging to determine how deterministic and nondeterministic processes contribute to behavior. We overcome this by applying a nonparametric, linear kernel-based analysis to behavioral data of monkeys steering through a virtual environment in two experimental contexts. In a given context, the results were consistent with previous work that described the transformation as a second-order linear system. Classically, the parameters of such second-order models are associated with physical properties of the limb such as viscosity and stiffness that are commonly assumed to be approximately constant. By contrast, we found that the fit kernels differed strongly across tasks in these and other parameters, suggesting context-dependent changes in neural and biomechanical processes. We additionally fit residuals to a simple noise model and found that the form of the noise was highly conserved across both contexts and animals. Strikingly, the fitted noise also closely matched that found previously in a human steering task. Altogether, this work presents a kernel-based analysis that characterizes the context-dependence of deterministic and non-deterministic components of a closed-loop sensorimotor task.

4.
Curr Opin Neurobiol ; 58: 112-121, 2019 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31563083

RESUMEN

A central tenet of neuroscience is that the brain works through large populations of interacting neurons. With recent advances in recording techniques, the inner working of these populations has come into full view. Analyzing the resulting large-scale data sets is challenging because of the often complex and 'mixed' dependency of neural activities on experimental parameters, such as stimuli, decisions, or motor responses. Here we review recent insights gained from analyzing these data with dimensionality reduction methods that 'demix' these dependencies. We demonstrate that the mappings from (carefully chosen) experimental parameters to population activities appear to be typical and stable across tasks, brain areas, and animals, and are often identifiable by linear methods. By considering when and why dimensionality reduction and demixing work well, we argue for a view of population coding in which populations represent (demixed) latent signals, corresponding to stimuli, decisions, motor responses, and so on. These latent signals are encoded into neural population activity via non-linear mappings and decoded via linear readouts. We explain how such a scheme can facilitate the propagation of information across cortical areas, and we review neural network architectures that can reproduce the encoding and decoding of latent signals in population activities. These architectures promise a link from the biophysics of single neurons to the activities of neural populations.


Asunto(s)
Redes Neurales de la Computación , Neuronas , Animales , Encéfalo , Modelos Neurológicos
5.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 3493, 2018 02 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29472547

RESUMEN

In vivo calcium imaging has become a method of choice to image neuronal population activity throughout the nervous system. These experiments generate large sequences of images. Their analysis is computationally intensive and typically involves motion correction, image segmentation into regions of interest (ROIs), and extraction of fluorescence traces from each ROI. Out of focus fluorescence from surrounding neuropil and other cells can strongly contaminate the signal assigned to a given ROI. In this study, we introduce the FISSA toolbox (Fast Image Signal Separation Analysis) for neuropil decontamination. Given pre-defined ROIs, the FISSA toolbox automatically extracts the surrounding local neuropil and performs blind-source separation with non-negative matrix factorization. Using both simulated and in vivo data, we show that this toolbox performs similarly or better than existing published methods. FISSA requires only little RAM, and allows for fast processing of large datasets even on a standard laptop. The FISSA toolbox is available in Python, with an option for MATLAB format outputs, and can easily be integrated into existing workflows. It is available from Github and the standard Python repositories.

6.
Vision Res ; 126: 164-173, 2016 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26232611

RESUMEN

As expressed in the Gestalt law of good continuation, human perception tends to associate stimuli that form smooth continuations. Contextual modulation in primary visual cortex, in the form of association fields, is believed to play an important role in this process. Yet a unified and principled account of the good continuation law on the neural level is lacking. In this study we introduce a population model of primary visual cortex. Its contextual interactions depend on the elastica curvature energy of the smoothest contour connecting oriented bars. As expected, this model leads to association fields consistent with data. However, in addition the model displays tilt-illusions for stimulus configurations with grating and single bars that closely match psychophysics. Furthermore, the model explains not only pop-out of contours amid a variety of backgrounds, but also pop-out of single targets amid a uniform background. We thus propose that elastica is a unifying principle of the visual cortical network.


Asunto(s)
Percepción de Forma/fisiología , Ilusiones Ópticas/fisiología , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Teoría Gestáltica , Humanos , Modelos Neurológicos , Modelos Teóricos , Estimulación Luminosa , Psicofísica
7.
Elife ; 52016 08 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27552056

RESUMEN

Cortical responses to sensory stimuli are modulated by behavioral state. In the primary visual cortex (V1), visual responses of pyramidal neurons increase during locomotion. This response gain was suggested to be mediated through inhibitory neurons, resulting in the disinhibition of pyramidal neurons. Using in vivo two-photon calcium imaging in layers 2/3 and 4 in mouse V1, we reveal that locomotion increases the activity of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), somatostatin (SST) and parvalbumin (PV)-positive interneurons during visual stimulation, challenging the disinhibition model. In darkness, while most VIP and PV neurons remained locomotion responsive, SST and excitatory neurons were largely non-responsive. Context-dependent locomotion responses were found in each cell type, with the highest proportion among SST neurons. These findings establish that modulation of neuronal activity by locomotion is context-dependent and contest the generality of a disinhibitory circuit for gain control of sensory responses by behavioral state.


Asunto(s)
Conducta Animal , Locomoción , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Animales , Interneuronas/fisiología , Ratones , Modelos Neurológicos , Células Piramidales/fisiología
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