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1.
J Vis ; 24(6): 12, 2024 Jun 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38884544

RESUMEN

Neural population activity in sensory cortex informs our perceptual interpretation of the environment. Oftentimes, this population activity will support multiple alternative interpretations. The larger the spread of probability over different alternatives, the more uncertain the selected perceptual interpretation. We test the hypothesis that the reliability of perceptual interpretations can be revealed through simple transformations of sensory population activity. We recorded V1 population activity in fixating macaques while presenting oriented stimuli under different levels of nuisance variability and signal strength. We developed a decoding procedure to infer from V1 activity the most likely stimulus orientation as well as the certainty of this estimate. Our analysis shows that response magnitude, response dispersion, and variability in response gain all offer useful proxies for orientation certainty. Of these three metrics, the last one has the strongest association with the decoder's uncertainty estimates. These results clarify that the nature of neural population activity in sensory cortex provides downstream circuits with multiple options to assess the reliability of perceptual interpretations.


Asunto(s)
Macaca mulatta , Estimulación Luminosa , Corteza Visual , Animales , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Estimulación Luminosa/métodos , Percepción Visual/fisiología , Masculino , Orientación/fisiología , Neuronas/fisiología
2.
Nat Hum Behav ; 7(1): 142-154, 2023 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36344656

RESUMEN

Decisions vary in difficulty. Humans know this and typically report more confidence in easy than in difficult decisions. However, confidence reports do not perfectly track decision accuracy, but also reflect response biases and difficulty misjudgements. To isolate the quality of confidence reports, we developed a model of the decision-making process underlying choice-confidence data. In this model, confidence reflects a subject's estimate of the reliability of their decision. The quality of this estimate is limited by the subject's uncertainty about the uncertainty of the variable that informs their decision ('meta-uncertainty'). This model provides an accurate account of choice-confidence data across a broad range of perceptual and cognitive tasks, investigated in six previous studies. We find meta-uncertainty varies across subjects, is stable over time, generalizes across some domains and can be manipulated experimentally. The model offers a parsimonious explanation for the computational processes that underlie and constrain the sense of confidence.


Asunto(s)
Toma de Decisiones , Humanos , Toma de Decisiones/fisiología , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Incertidumbre
3.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 2513, 2020 05 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32427825

RESUMEN

Uncertainty is intrinsic to perception. Neural circuits which process sensory information must therefore also represent the reliability of this information. How they do so is a topic of debate. We propose a model of visual cortex in which average neural response strength encodes stimulus features, while cross-neuron variability in response gain encodes the uncertainty of these features. To test this model, we studied spiking activity of neurons in macaque V1 and V2 elicited by repeated presentations of stimuli whose uncertainty was manipulated in distinct ways. We show that gain variability of individual neurons is tuned to stimulus uncertainty, that this tuning is specific to the features encoded by these neurons and largely invariant to the source of uncertainty. We demonstrate that this behavior naturally arises from known gain-control mechanisms, and illustrate how downstream circuits can jointly decode stimulus features and their uncertainty from sensory population activity.


Asunto(s)
Neuronas/fisiología , Corteza Visual/fisiología , Animales , Macaca mulatta , Masculino , Modelos Neurológicos , Incertidumbre , Percepción Visual
4.
J Neurophysiol ; 118(4): 2371-2377, 2017 10 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28724777

RESUMEN

The nervous system achieves stable perceptual representations of objects despite large variations in the activity patterns of sensory receptors. Here, we explore perceptual constancy in the sense of touch. Specifically, we investigate the invariance of tactile texture perception across changes in scanning speed. Texture signals in the nerve have been shown to be highly dependent on speed: temporal spiking patterns in nerve fibers that encode fine textural features contract or dilate systematically with increases or decreases in scanning speed, respectively, resulting in concomitant changes in response rate. Nevertheless, texture perception has been shown, albeit with restricted stimulus sets and limited perceptual assays, to be independent of scanning speed. Indeed, previous studies investigated the effect of scanning speed on perceived roughness, only one aspect of texture, often with impoverished stimuli, namely gratings and embossed dot patterns. To fill this gap, we probe the perceptual constancy of a wide range of textures using two different paradigms: one that probes texture perception along well-established sensory dimensions independently and one that probes texture perception as a whole. We find that texture perception is highly stable across scanning speeds, irrespective of the texture or the perceptual assay. Any speed-related effects are dwarfed by differences in percepts evoked by different textures. This remarkable speed invariance of texture perception stands in stark contrast to the strong dependence of the texture responses of nerve fibers on scanning speed. Our results imply neural mechanisms that compensate for scanning speed to achieve stable representations of surface texture.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Our brain forms stable representations of objects regardless of viewpoint, a phenomenon known as invariance that has been described in several sensory modalities. Here, we explore invariance in the sense of touch and show that the tactile perception of texture does not depend on scanning speed. This perceptual constancy implies neural mechanisms that extract information about texture from the response of nerve fibers such that the resulting neural representation is stable across speeds.


Asunto(s)
Movimiento , Percepción del Tacto , Adolescente , Femenino , Mano/inervación , Mano/fisiología , Humanos , Masculino , Tacto , Adulto Joven
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