Joiner Wilsaan M, Cavanaugh James, Wurtz Robert H, Cumming Bruce G
Laboratory of Sensorimotor Research, National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, and
Department of Bioengineering, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia 22030.
J Neurosci. 2017 Oct 11;37(41):9871-9879. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1446-17.2017. Epub 2017 Sep 14.
When light falls within a neuronal visual receptive field (RF) the resulting activity is referred to as the visual response. Recent work suggests this activity is in response to both the visual stimulation and the abrupt appearance, or salience, of the presentation. Here we present a novel method for distinguishing the two, based on the timing of random and nonrandom presentations. We examined these contributions in frontal eye field (FEF; = 51) and as a comparison, an early stage in the primary visual cortex (V1; = 15) of male monkeys (). An array of identical stimuli was presented within and outside the neuronal RF while we manipulated salience by varying the time between stimulus presentations. We hypothesized that the rapid presentation would reduce salience (the sudden appearance within the visual field) of a stimulus at any one location, and thus decrease responses driven by salience in the RF. We found that when the interstimulus interval decreased from 500 to 16 ms there was an approximate 79% reduction in the FEF response compared with an estimated 17% decrease in V1. This reduction in FEF response for rapid presentation was evident even when the random sequence preceding a stimulus did not stimulate the RF for 500 ms. The time course of these response changes in FEF suggest that salience is represented much earlier (<100 ms following stimulus onset) than previously estimated. Our results suggest that the contribution of salience dominates at higher levels of the visual system. The neuronal responses in early visual processing [e.g., primary visual cortex (V1)] reflect primarily the retinal stimulus. Processing in higher visual areas is modulated by a combination of the visual stimulation and contextual factors, such as salience, but identifying these components separately has been difficult. Here we quantified these contributions at a late stage of visual processing [frontal eye field (FEF)] and as a comparison, an early stage in V1. Our results suggest that as visual information continues through higher levels of processing the neural responses are no longer driven primarily by the visual stimulus in the receptive field, but by the broader context that stimulus defines-very different from current views about visual signals in FEF.
当光线落入神经元的视觉感受野(RF)时,由此产生的活动被称为视觉反应。最近的研究表明,这种活动是对视觉刺激以及呈现的突然出现(即显著性)的反应。在这里,我们基于随机和非随机呈现的时间,提出了一种区分这两者的新方法。我们在雄性猴子的额叶眼区(FEF;n = 51)进行了研究,并作为比较,在初级视觉皮层(V1;n = 15)的早期阶段进行了研究。当我们通过改变刺激呈现之间的时间来操纵显著性时,在神经元感受野内外呈现了一系列相同的刺激。我们假设快速呈现会降低任何一个位置上刺激的显著性(在视野中的突然出现),从而减少感受野中由显著性驱动的反应。我们发现,当刺激间隔从500毫秒减少到16毫秒时,与V1中估计约17%的减少相比,FEF反应大约减少了79%。即使在刺激之前的随机序列在500毫秒内没有刺激感受野时,FEF中快速呈现的反应减少也很明显。FEF中这些反应变化的时间进程表明,显著性的表征比之前估计的要早得多(刺激开始后<100毫秒)。我们的结果表明,显著性的贡献在视觉系统的较高水平占主导地位。早期视觉处理中的神经元反应[例如初级视觉皮层(V1)]主要反映视网膜刺激。较高视觉区域的处理受到视觉刺激和诸如显著性等上下文因素的组合调制,但分别识别这些成分一直很困难。在这里,我们在视觉处理的后期阶段[额叶眼区(FEF)]进行了这些贡献的量化,并作为比较,在V1的早期阶段进行了量化。我们的结果表明,随着视觉信息在更高水平的处理中继续传递,神经反应不再主要由感受野中的视觉刺激驱动,而是由刺激所定义的更广泛的上下文驱动——这与目前关于FEF中视觉信号的观点非常不同。