Suppression of Spontaneous Activity before Visual Response in the Primate V1 Neurons during a Visually Guided Saccade Task

Visually guided saccadic responses are thought to involve multiple stages of processing in diverse brain structures including the primary visual cortex (V1). The variability of neural activity in each of these structures may present ambiguities for downstream stages in identifying sensory and motor...

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Main Authors: Choongkil Lee, Jungah Lee, Kyesam Jung
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2012-10-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1068/if610
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spelling doaj-67b0aa7213cb4110966b5ac5b5433b622020-11-25T02:55:15ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952012-10-01310.1068/if61010.1068_if610Suppression of Spontaneous Activity before Visual Response in the Primate V1 Neurons during a Visually Guided Saccade TaskChoongkil Lee0Jungah LeeKyesam JungSeoul National UniversityVisually guided saccadic responses are thought to involve multiple stages of processing in diverse brain structures including the primary visual cortex (V1). The variability of neural activity in each of these structures may present ambiguities for downstream stages in identifying sensory and motor signals among spontaneous discharges. Response time of saccadic eye movements made toward a visual target is correlated with the time of first spike of V1 evoked by the target (Lee et al., 2010 Journal of Neurophysiology 104 2556–2572). This suggests that downstream neurons receiving the output of V1 are faced with a challenging task of discriminating spikes of visual response against spontaneous discharge. Here we report a novel response property of the output activity of the V1 so that, immediately before neurons discharge a burst of activity to a visual target, spontaneous discharges were transiently suppressed. This suppression was ultra-fast and peaked around 20 ms after target onset. The results of a simulation indicated that the suppression enhanced reliability of detecting activity onset. Thus, the initial transient suppression is hypothesized to enhance temporal contrast for identifying the onset of visual response by downstream neurons.https://doi.org/10.1068/if610
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Choongkil Lee
Jungah Lee
Kyesam Jung
spellingShingle Choongkil Lee
Jungah Lee
Kyesam Jung
Suppression of Spontaneous Activity before Visual Response in the Primate V1 Neurons during a Visually Guided Saccade Task
i-Perception
author_facet Choongkil Lee
Jungah Lee
Kyesam Jung
author_sort Choongkil Lee
title Suppression of Spontaneous Activity before Visual Response in the Primate V1 Neurons during a Visually Guided Saccade Task
title_short Suppression of Spontaneous Activity before Visual Response in the Primate V1 Neurons during a Visually Guided Saccade Task
title_full Suppression of Spontaneous Activity before Visual Response in the Primate V1 Neurons during a Visually Guided Saccade Task
title_fullStr Suppression of Spontaneous Activity before Visual Response in the Primate V1 Neurons during a Visually Guided Saccade Task
title_full_unstemmed Suppression of Spontaneous Activity before Visual Response in the Primate V1 Neurons during a Visually Guided Saccade Task
title_sort suppression of spontaneous activity before visual response in the primate v1 neurons during a visually guided saccade task
publisher SAGE Publishing
series i-Perception
issn 2041-6695
publishDate 2012-10-01
description Visually guided saccadic responses are thought to involve multiple stages of processing in diverse brain structures including the primary visual cortex (V1). The variability of neural activity in each of these structures may present ambiguities for downstream stages in identifying sensory and motor signals among spontaneous discharges. Response time of saccadic eye movements made toward a visual target is correlated with the time of first spike of V1 evoked by the target (Lee et al., 2010 Journal of Neurophysiology 104 2556–2572). This suggests that downstream neurons receiving the output of V1 are faced with a challenging task of discriminating spikes of visual response against spontaneous discharge. Here we report a novel response property of the output activity of the V1 so that, immediately before neurons discharge a burst of activity to a visual target, spontaneous discharges were transiently suppressed. This suppression was ultra-fast and peaked around 20 ms after target onset. The results of a simulation indicated that the suppression enhanced reliability of detecting activity onset. Thus, the initial transient suppression is hypothesized to enhance temporal contrast for identifying the onset of visual response by downstream neurons.
url https://doi.org/10.1068/if610
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AT jungahlee suppressionofspontaneousactivitybeforevisualresponseintheprimatev1neuronsduringavisuallyguidedsaccadetask
AT kyesamjung suppressionofspontaneousactivitybeforevisualresponseintheprimatev1neuronsduringavisuallyguidedsaccadetask
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