Short-Time Scale Dynamics in the Responses to Multiple Stimuli in Visual Cortex

Many previous studies have used the presentation of multiple stimuli in the receptive fields (RFs) of visual cortical neurons to explore how neurons might operate on multiple inputs. Most of these experiments have used two fixed stimulus locations within the RF of each neuron. Here the effects...

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Main Author: Timothy eGawne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2011-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
V2
max
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00323/full
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spelling doaj-a7236e0226cc4c758a4c220e29f19bf02020-11-24T22:51:09ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782011-11-01210.3389/fpsyg.2011.0032311526Short-Time Scale Dynamics in the Responses to Multiple Stimuli in Visual CortexTimothy eGawne0University of Alabama at BirminghamMany previous studies have used the presentation of multiple stimuli in the receptive fields (RFs) of visual cortical neurons to explore how neurons might operate on multiple inputs. Most of these experiments have used two fixed stimulus locations within the RF of each neuron. Here the effects of using different positions within the RF of a neuron were explored. The stimuli were presented singly at one of six locations, and also at 15 pair-wise combinations, for 24 V2 cortical neurons in two macaque monkeys. There was considerable variability in how pairs of stimuli interacted within the receptive field of any given neuron: changing the position of the stimuli could result in enhancement, winner-take-all, or suppression relative to the strongest response to a stimulus presented by itself. Across the population of neurons there was no correlation between response strength and response latency. However, for many stimulus pairs the response latency was tightly locked to the shortest response latency of any single stimulus presented by itself independent of changes in response magnitude. In other words, a stimulus that by itself elicited a relatively long latency response, could affect the magnitude of the response to a pair of stimuli, but could not change the latency. A model is proposed whereby changes in response magnitude that do not result in changes in response latency reflect rapid feed-forward processing mechanisms, and these rapid mechanisms can suppress slower, longer time-constant processing mechanisms. These results may provide constraints on the development of models of cortical information processing.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00323/fullFeedbacklatencyV2maxwinner-take-all
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Timothy eGawne
spellingShingle Timothy eGawne
Short-Time Scale Dynamics in the Responses to Multiple Stimuli in Visual Cortex
Frontiers in Psychology
Feedback
latency
V2
max
winner-take-all
author_facet Timothy eGawne
author_sort Timothy eGawne
title Short-Time Scale Dynamics in the Responses to Multiple Stimuli in Visual Cortex
title_short Short-Time Scale Dynamics in the Responses to Multiple Stimuli in Visual Cortex
title_full Short-Time Scale Dynamics in the Responses to Multiple Stimuli in Visual Cortex
title_fullStr Short-Time Scale Dynamics in the Responses to Multiple Stimuli in Visual Cortex
title_full_unstemmed Short-Time Scale Dynamics in the Responses to Multiple Stimuli in Visual Cortex
title_sort short-time scale dynamics in the responses to multiple stimuli in visual cortex
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2011-11-01
description Many previous studies have used the presentation of multiple stimuli in the receptive fields (RFs) of visual cortical neurons to explore how neurons might operate on multiple inputs. Most of these experiments have used two fixed stimulus locations within the RF of each neuron. Here the effects of using different positions within the RF of a neuron were explored. The stimuli were presented singly at one of six locations, and also at 15 pair-wise combinations, for 24 V2 cortical neurons in two macaque monkeys. There was considerable variability in how pairs of stimuli interacted within the receptive field of any given neuron: changing the position of the stimuli could result in enhancement, winner-take-all, or suppression relative to the strongest response to a stimulus presented by itself. Across the population of neurons there was no correlation between response strength and response latency. However, for many stimulus pairs the response latency was tightly locked to the shortest response latency of any single stimulus presented by itself independent of changes in response magnitude. In other words, a stimulus that by itself elicited a relatively long latency response, could affect the magnitude of the response to a pair of stimuli, but could not change the latency. A model is proposed whereby changes in response magnitude that do not result in changes in response latency reflect rapid feed-forward processing mechanisms, and these rapid mechanisms can suppress slower, longer time-constant processing mechanisms. These results may provide constraints on the development of models of cortical information processing.
topic Feedback
latency
V2
max
winner-take-all
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00323/full
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