Spatial and temporal scales of neuronal correlation in visual area V4.


Autoria(s): Smith, MA; Sommer, MA
Data(s)

20/03/2013

Formato

5422 - 5432

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23516307

33/12/5422

J Neurosci, 2013, 33 (12), pp. 5422 - 5432

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10295

1529-2401

Relação

J Neurosci

10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4782-12.2013

Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

United States

Resumo

The spiking activity of nearby cortical neurons is correlated on both short and long time scales. Understanding this shared variability in firing patterns is critical for appreciating the representation of sensory stimuli in ensembles of neurons, the coincident influences of neurons on common targets, and the functional implications of microcircuitry. Our knowledge about neuronal correlations, however, derives largely from experiments that used different recording methods, analysis techniques, and cortical regions. Here we studied the structure of neuronal correlation in area V4 of alert macaques using recording and analysis procedures designed to match those used previously in primary visual cortex (V1), the major input to V4. We found that the spatial and temporal properties of correlations in V4 were remarkably similar to those of V1, with two notable differences: correlated variability in V4 was approximately one-third the magnitude of that in V1 and synchrony in V4 was less temporally precise than in V1. In both areas, spontaneous activity (measured during fixation while viewing a blank screen) was approximately twice as correlated as visual-evoked activity. The results provide a foundation for understanding how the structure of neuronal correlation differs among brain regions and stages in cortical processing and suggest that it is likely governed by features of neuronal circuits that are shared across the visual cortex.

Idioma(s)

ENG

Palavras-Chave #Action Potentials #Animals #Evoked Potentials, Visual #Fixation, Ocular #Interneurons #Macaca mulatta #Male #Photic Stimulation #Reaction Time #Space Perception #Visual Cortex #Visual Pathways