Lateral spread of orientation selectivity in V1 is controlled by intracortical cooperativity

Neurons in the primary visual cortex receive subliminal information originating from the periphery of their receptive fields through a variety of cortical connections. In the cat primary visual cortex, long-range horizontal axons have been reported to preferentially bind to distant columns of simila...

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Main Authors: Frédéric eChavane, Dahlia eSharon, Dirk eJancke, Olivier eMarre, Yves eFrégnac, Amiram eGrinvald
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2011-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2011.00004/full
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spelling doaj-457de3ac00db4f9985e9f3a6a1225cee2020-11-24T23:30:14ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience1662-51372011-02-01510.3389/fnsys.2011.000049166Lateral spread of orientation selectivity in V1 is controlled by intracortical cooperativityFrédéric eChavane0Dahlia eSharon1Dirk eJancke2Olivier eMarre3Yves eFrégnac4Amiram eGrinvald5Weizmann Institute of ScienceWeizmann Institute of ScienceWeizmann Institute of ScienceCNRSCNRSWeizmann Institute of ScienceNeurons in the primary visual cortex receive subliminal information originating from the periphery of their receptive fields through a variety of cortical connections. In the cat primary visual cortex, long-range horizontal axons have been reported to preferentially bind to distant columns of similar orientation preferences, whereas feedback connections from higher visual areas provide a more diverse functional input. To understand the role of these lateral interactions, it is crucial to characterize their effective functional connectivity and tuning properties. However, the overall functional impact of cortical lateral connections, whatever their anatomical origin, is unknown since it has never been directly characterized. Using direct measurements of postsynaptic integration in cat areas 17/18, we performed multi-scale assessments of the functional impact of visually driven lateral networks. Voltage-sensitive dye imaging showed that local oriented stimuli evoke an orientation-selective activity that remains confined to the cortical feedforward imprint of the stimulus. Beyond a distance of one hypercolumn, the lateral spread of cortical activity gradually lost its orientation preference approximated as an exponential with a space constant of about 1mm. Intracellular recordings showed that this loss of orientation selectivity arises from the diversity of converging synaptic input patterns originating from outside the classical receptive field. In contrast, when the stimulus size was increased, we observed orientation-selective spread of activation beyond the feedforward imprint. We conclude that stimulus-induced cooperativity enhances the long-range orientation-selective spread.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2011.00004/fullVoltage-Sensitive Dye Imagingfunctional connectivityprimary visual cortexhorizontal propagationintracellular recordingslateral interaction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Frédéric eChavane
Dahlia eSharon
Dirk eJancke
Olivier eMarre
Yves eFrégnac
Amiram eGrinvald
spellingShingle Frédéric eChavane
Dahlia eSharon
Dirk eJancke
Olivier eMarre
Yves eFrégnac
Amiram eGrinvald
Lateral spread of orientation selectivity in V1 is controlled by intracortical cooperativity
Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
Voltage-Sensitive Dye Imaging
functional connectivity
primary visual cortex
horizontal propagation
intracellular recordings
lateral interaction
author_facet Frédéric eChavane
Dahlia eSharon
Dirk eJancke
Olivier eMarre
Yves eFrégnac
Amiram eGrinvald
author_sort Frédéric eChavane
title Lateral spread of orientation selectivity in V1 is controlled by intracortical cooperativity
title_short Lateral spread of orientation selectivity in V1 is controlled by intracortical cooperativity
title_full Lateral spread of orientation selectivity in V1 is controlled by intracortical cooperativity
title_fullStr Lateral spread of orientation selectivity in V1 is controlled by intracortical cooperativity
title_full_unstemmed Lateral spread of orientation selectivity in V1 is controlled by intracortical cooperativity
title_sort lateral spread of orientation selectivity in v1 is controlled by intracortical cooperativity
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
issn 1662-5137
publishDate 2011-02-01
description Neurons in the primary visual cortex receive subliminal information originating from the periphery of their receptive fields through a variety of cortical connections. In the cat primary visual cortex, long-range horizontal axons have been reported to preferentially bind to distant columns of similar orientation preferences, whereas feedback connections from higher visual areas provide a more diverse functional input. To understand the role of these lateral interactions, it is crucial to characterize their effective functional connectivity and tuning properties. However, the overall functional impact of cortical lateral connections, whatever their anatomical origin, is unknown since it has never been directly characterized. Using direct measurements of postsynaptic integration in cat areas 17/18, we performed multi-scale assessments of the functional impact of visually driven lateral networks. Voltage-sensitive dye imaging showed that local oriented stimuli evoke an orientation-selective activity that remains confined to the cortical feedforward imprint of the stimulus. Beyond a distance of one hypercolumn, the lateral spread of cortical activity gradually lost its orientation preference approximated as an exponential with a space constant of about 1mm. Intracellular recordings showed that this loss of orientation selectivity arises from the diversity of converging synaptic input patterns originating from outside the classical receptive field. In contrast, when the stimulus size was increased, we observed orientation-selective spread of activation beyond the feedforward imprint. We conclude that stimulus-induced cooperativity enhances the long-range orientation-selective spread.
topic Voltage-Sensitive Dye Imaging
functional connectivity
primary visual cortex
horizontal propagation
intracellular recordings
lateral interaction
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2011.00004/full
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