Bardy Cedric, Huang Jin Yu, Wang Chun, FitzGibbon Thomas, Dreher Bogdan
Discipline of Anatomy and Histology, School of Medical Sciences and Bosch Institute (F13), The University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
J Physiol. 2006 Aug 1;574(Pt 3):731-50. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2006.110320. Epub 2006 May 18.
In mammalian striate cortex (V1), two distinct functional classes of neurones, the so-called simple and complex cells, are routinely distinguished. They can be quantitatively differentiated from each other on the basis of the ratio between the phase-variant (F1) component and the mean firing rate (F0) of spike responses to luminance-modulated sinusoidal gratings (simple, F1/F0 > 1; complex, F1/F0 < 1). We investigated how recurrent cortico-cortical connections affect the spatial phase-variance of responses of V1 cells in the cat. F1/F0 ratios of the responses to optimally oriented drifting sine-wave gratings covering the classical receptive field (CRF) of single V1 cells were compared to those of: (1) responses to gratings covering the CRFs combined with gratings of different orientations presented to the 'silent' surrounds; and (2) responses to CRF stimulation during reversible inactivation of postero-temporal visual (PTV) cortex. For complex cells, the relative strength of the silent surround suppression on CRF-driven responses was positively correlated with the extent of increases in F1/F0 ratios. Inactivation of PTV cortex increased F1/F0 ratios of CRF-driven responses of complex cells only. Overall, activation of suppressive surrounds or inactivation of PTV 'converted' substantial proportions (50 and 30%, respectively) of complex cells into simple-like cells (F1/F0 > 1). Thus, the simple-complex distinction depends, at least partly, on information coming from the silent surrounds and/or feedback from 'higher-order' cortices. These results support the idea that simple and complex cells belong to the same basic cortical circuit and the spatial phase-variance of their responses depends on the relative strength of different synaptic inputs.
在哺乳动物的纹状皮层(V1)中,通常可区分出两类不同功能的神经元,即所谓的简单细胞和复杂细胞。根据对亮度调制正弦光栅的尖峰反应中相位变化(F1)成分与平均放电率(F0)之间的比率,它们可以在数量上相互区分(简单细胞,F1/F0>1;复杂细胞,F1/F0<1)。我们研究了皮层-皮层间的反馈连接如何影响猫V1细胞反应的空间相位变化。将单个V1细胞经典感受野(CRF)上覆盖最佳定向漂移正弦波光栅的反应的F1/F0比率,与以下情况的反应的F1/F0比率进行比较:(1)对覆盖CRF的光栅与呈现给“沉默”周边的不同方向光栅组合的反应;(2)后颞叶视觉(PTV)皮层可逆失活期间对CRF刺激的反应。对于复杂细胞,沉默周边对CRF驱动反应的抑制相对强度与F1/F0比率的增加程度呈正相关。PTV皮层失活仅增加了复杂细胞CRF驱动反应的F1/F0比率。总体而言,抑制性周边的激活或PTV的失活将相当比例(分别为50%和30%)的复杂细胞“转变”为类简单细胞(F1/F0>1)。因此,简单细胞与复杂细胞的区分至少部分取决于来自沉默周边的信息和/或来自“高阶”皮层的反馈。这些结果支持了这样一种观点,即简单细胞和复杂细胞属于同一基本皮层回路,它们反应的空间相位变化取决于不同突触输入的相对强度。