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1.
Neurosci Bull ; 38(5): 489-504, 2022 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34783985

RESUMO

Studies have shown that spatial attention remarkably affects the trial-to-trial response variability shared between neurons. Difficulty in the attentional task adjusts how much concentration we maintain on what is currently important and what is filtered as irrelevant sensory information. However, how task difficulty mediates the interactions between neurons with separated receptive fields (RFs) that are attended to or attended away is still not clear. We examined spike count correlations between single-unit activities recorded simultaneously in the primary visual cortex (V1) while monkeys performed a spatial attention task with two levels of difficulty. Moreover, the RFs of the two neurons recorded were non-overlapping to allow us to study fluctuations in the correlated responses between competing visual inputs when the focus of attention was allocated to the RF of one neuron. While increasing difficulty in the spatial attention task, spike count correlations were either decreased to become negative between neuronal pairs, implying competition among them, with one neuron (or none) exhibiting attentional enhancement of firing rate, or increased to become positive, suggesting inter-neuronal cooperation, with one of the pair showing attentional suppression of spiking responses. Besides, the modulation of spike count correlations by task difficulty was independent of the attended locations. These findings provide evidence that task difficulty affects the functional interactions between different neuronal pools in V1 when selective attention resolves the spatial competition.


Assuntos
Córtex Visual , Animais , Atenção/fisiologia , Macaca mulatta , Neurônios/fisiologia , Estimulação Luminosa , Córtex Visual Primário , Córtex Visual/fisiologia
2.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31592129

RESUMO

Sensory neurons often have variable responses to repeated presentations of the same stimulus, which can significantly degrade the stimulus information contained in those responses. This information can in principle be preserved if variability is shared across many neurons, but depends on the structure of the shared variability and its relationship to sensory encoding at the population level. The structure of this shared variability in neural activity can be characterized by latent variable models, although they have thus far typically been used under restrictive mathematical assumptions, such as assuming linear transformations between the latent variables and neural activity. Here we introduce two nonlinear latent variable models for analyzing large-scale neural recordings. We first present a general nonlinear latent variable model that is agnostic to the stimulus tuning properties of the individual neurons, and is hence well suited for exploring neural populations whose tuning properties are not well characterized. This motivates a second class of model, the Generalized Affine Model, which simultaneously determines each neuron's stimulus selectivity and a set of latent variables that modulate these stimulus-driven responses both additively and multiplicatively. While these approaches can detect very general nonlinear relationships in shared neural variability, we find that neural activity recorded in anesthetized primary visual cortex (V1) is best described by a single additive and single multiplicative latent variable, i.e., an "affine model". In contrast, application of the same models to recordings in awake macaque prefrontal cortex discover more general nonlinearities to compactly describe the population response variability. These results thus demonstrate how nonlinear latent variable models can be used to describe population variability, and suggest that a range of methods is necessary to study different brain regions under different experimental conditions.

3.
Neuroscience Bulletin ; (6): 489-504, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-929090

RESUMO

Studies have shown that spatial attention remarkably affects the trial-to-trial response variability shared between neurons. Difficulty in the attentional task adjusts how much concentration we maintain on what is currently important and what is filtered as irrelevant sensory information. However, how task difficulty mediates the interactions between neurons with separated receptive fields (RFs) that are attended to or attended away is still not clear. We examined spike count correlations between single-unit activities recorded simultaneously in the primary visual cortex (V1) while monkeys performed a spatial attention task with two levels of difficulty. Moreover, the RFs of the two neurons recorded were non-overlapping to allow us to study fluctuations in the correlated responses between competing visual inputs when the focus of attention was allocated to the RF of one neuron. While increasing difficulty in the spatial attention task, spike count correlations were either decreased to become negative between neuronal pairs, implying competition among them, with one neuron (or none) exhibiting attentional enhancement of firing rate, or increased to become positive, suggesting inter-neuronal cooperation, with one of the pair showing attentional suppression of spiking responses. Besides, the modulation of spike count correlations by task difficulty was independent of the attended locations. These findings provide evidence that task difficulty affects the functional interactions between different neuronal pools in V1 when selective attention resolves the spatial competition.


Assuntos
Animais , Atenção/fisiologia , Macaca mulatta , Neurônios/fisiologia , Estimulação Luminosa , Córtex Visual Primário , Córtex Visual/fisiologia
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