Department of Integrative Brain Science, Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto University, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto, Japan.
J Neurophysiol. 2013 Dec;110(12):2773-91. doi: 10.1152/jn.00360.2013. Epub 2013 Sep 25.
During visual search, neurons in the lateral intraparietal area (LIP) discriminate the target from distractors by exhibiting stronger activation when the target appears within the receptive field than when it appears outside the receptive field. It is generally thought that such target-discriminative activity is produced by the combination of target-related facilitation and distractor-related suppression. However, little is known about how the target-discriminative activity is constituted by these two types of neural modulation. To address this issue, we recorded activity from LIP of monkeys performing a visual search task that consisted of target-present and target-absent trials. Monkeys had to make a saccade to a target in the target-present trials, whereas they had to maintain fixation in the target-absent trials, in which only distractors were presented. By introducing the activity from the latter trials as neutral activity, we were able to separate the target-discriminative activity into target-related elevation and distractor-related reduction components. We found that the target-discriminative activity of most LIP neurons consisted of the combination of target-related elevation and distractor-related reduction or only target-related elevation. In contrast, target-discriminative activity composed of only distractor-related reduction was observed for very few neurons. We also found that, on average, target-related elevation was stronger and occurred earlier compared with distractor-related reduction. Finally, we consider possible underlying mechanisms, including lateral inhibitory interactions, responsible for target-discriminative activity in visual search. The present findings provide insight into how neuronal modulations shape target-discriminative activity during visual search.
在视觉搜索中,外侧顶内沟(Lateral Intraparietal Area,LIP)中的神经元通过表现出更强的激活来区分目标和干扰物,当目标出现在感受野内时比出现在感受野外时更强。一般认为,这种目标区分活动是由目标相关的促进和干扰相关的抑制的组合产生的。然而,对于这两种类型的神经调制如何构成目标区分活动,我们知之甚少。为了解决这个问题,我们记录了猴子执行视觉搜索任务时 LIP 的活动,该任务包括目标出现和目标缺失的试验。在目标出现的试验中,猴子必须向目标进行扫视,而在目标缺失的试验中,它们必须保持注视,只有干扰物出现。通过引入后一种试验的活动作为中性活动,我们能够将目标区分活动分为目标相关的升高和干扰相关的降低成分。我们发现,大多数 LIP 神经元的目标区分活动由目标相关的升高和干扰相关的降低或仅目标相关的升高组成。相比之下,只有极少数神经元的目标区分活动由仅干扰相关的降低组成。我们还发现,平均而言,目标相关的升高比干扰相关的降低更强且更早发生。最后,我们考虑了可能的潜在机制,包括侧向抑制相互作用,这些机制负责视觉搜索中的目标区分活动。本研究结果提供了对视觉搜索中神经元调制如何塑造目标区分活动的深入了解。