Huang Jin Y, Wang Chun, Dreher Bogdan
Discipline of Anatomy and Histology, The University of SydneySydney, NSW, Australia.
Discipline of Biomedical Science, School of Medical Sciences, The University of SydneySydney, NSW, Australia.
Front Neural Circuits. 2017 Apr 25;11:27. doi: 10.3389/fncir.2017.00027. eCollection 2017.
We examined the effects of reversible inactivation of a higher-order, pattern/form-processing, postero-temporal visual (PTV) cortex on the background activities and spike-responses of single neurons in the ipsilateral cytoarchitectonic area 19 (putative area V3) of anesthetized domestic cats. Very occasionally (2/28), silencing recurrent "feedback" signals from PTV, resulted in significant and reversible reduction in background activity of area 19 neurons. By contrast, in large proportions of area 19 neurons, PTV inactivation resulted in: (i) significant reversible changes in the peak magnitude of their responses to visual stimuli (35.5%; 10/28); (ii) substantial reversible changes in direction selectivity indices (DSIs; 43%; 12/28); and (iii) reversible, upward shifts in preferred stimulus velocities (37%; 7/19). Substantial (≥20°) shifts in preferred orientation and/or substantial (≥20°) changes in width of orientation-tuning curves of area 19 neurons were however less common (26.5%; 4/15). In a series of experiments conducted earlier, inactivation of PTV also induced upward shifts in the preferred velocities of the ipsilateral cytoarchitectonic area 17 (V1) neurons responding optimally at low velocities. These upward shifts in preferred velocities of areas 19 and 17 neurons were often accompanied by substantial increases in DSIs. Thus, in both the primary visual cortex and the "intermediate" visual cortex (area 19), feedback from PTV plays a modulatory role in relation to stimulus velocity preferences and/or direction selectivity, that is, the properties which are usually believed to be determined by the inputs from the dorsal thalamus and/or feedforward inputs from the primary visual cortices. The apparent specialization of area 19 for processing information about stationary/slowly moving visual stimuli is at least partially determined, by the feedback from the higher-order pattern-processing visual area. Overall, the recurrent signals from the higher-order, pattern/form-processing visual cortex appear to play an important role in determining the magnitude of spike-responses and some "motion-related" receptive field properties of a substantial proportion of neurons in the intermediate form-processing visual area-area 19.
我们研究了高阶模式/形式处理的后颞视觉(PTV)皮质可逆失活对麻醉家猫同侧细胞构筑区19(假定的V3区)单个神经元背景活动和峰电位反应的影响。非常偶尔地(2/28),沉默来自PTV的递归“反馈”信号会导致19区神经元的背景活动显著且可逆地降低。相比之下,在大部分19区神经元中,PTV失活导致:(i)它们对视觉刺激反应的峰值幅度发生显著可逆变化(35.5%;10/28);(ii)方向选择性指数(DSIs)发生实质性可逆变化(43%;12/28);以及(iii)偏好刺激速度发生可逆的向上偏移(37%;7/19)。然而,19区神经元偏好方向的大幅(≥20°)偏移和/或方向调谐曲线宽度的大幅(≥20°)变化不太常见(26.5%;4/15)。在早期进行的一系列实验中,PTV失活还会导致同侧细胞构筑区17(V1)中以低速最佳反应的神经元的偏好速度向上偏移。19区和17区神经元偏好速度的这些向上偏移通常伴随着DSIs的大幅增加。因此,在初级视觉皮质和“中间”视觉皮质(19区)中,来自PTV的反馈在刺激速度偏好和/或方向选择性方面发挥调节作用,也就是说,这些属性通常被认为是由背侧丘脑的输入和/或初级视觉皮质的前馈输入所决定的。19区在处理静止/缓慢移动视觉刺激信息方面的明显特化至少部分是由来自高阶模式处理视觉区域的反馈所决定的。总体而言,来自高阶模式/形式处理视觉皮质的递归信号似乎在确定中间形式处理视觉区域——19区中相当一部分神经元的峰电位反应幅度和一些“与运动相关”的感受野特性方面发挥着重要作用。