Department of Psychology, Center for Integrative and Cognitive Neuroscience, and Vanderbilt Vision Research Center, Vanderbilt University , Nashville, Tennessee.
J Neurophysiol. 2019 May 1;121(5):1938-1952. doi: 10.1152/jn.00113.2019. Epub 2019 Mar 27.
Repetitive visual stimulation profoundly changes sensory processing in the primary visual cortex (V1). We show how the associated adaptive changes are linked to an altered flow of synaptic activation across the V1 laminar microcircuit. Using repeated visual stimulation, we recorded layer-specific responses in V1 of two fixating monkeys. We found that repetition-related spiking suppression was most pronounced outside granular V1 layers that receive the main retinogeniculate input. This repetition-related response suppression was robust to alternating stimuli between the eyes, in line with the notion that repetition-related adaptation is predominantly of cortical origin. Most importantly, current source density (CSD) analysis, which provides an estimate of local net depolarization, revealed that synaptic processing during repeated stimulation was most profoundly affected within supragranular layers, which harbor the bulk of cortico-cortical connections. Direct comparison of the temporal evolution of laminar CSD and spiking activity showed that stimulus repetition first affected supragranular synaptic currents, which translated into a reduction of stimulus-evoked spiking across layers. Together, these results suggest that repetition induces an altered state of intracortical processing that underpins visual adaptation. Our survival depends on our brains rapidly adapting to ever changing environments. A well-studied form of adaptation occurs whenever we encounter the same or similar stimuli repeatedly. We show that this repetition-related adaptation is supported by systematic changes in the flow of sensory activation across the laminar cortical microcircuitry of primary visual cortex. These results demonstrate how adaptation impacts neuronal interactions across cortical circuits.
重复的视觉刺激会深刻地改变初级视觉皮层(V1)的感觉处理。我们展示了相关的适应变化如何与 V1 层状微电路中突触激活的改变流相关联。使用重复的视觉刺激,我们记录了两只注视猴子的 V1 中的层特异性反应。我们发现,与重复相关的尖峰抑制在外颗粒层 V1 中最为明显,该层接收主要的视网膜神经节输入。这种与重复相关的反应抑制对眼睛之间的交替刺激非常稳健,与重复相关的适应主要来自皮层的概念一致。最重要的是,电流源密度(CSD)分析提供了局部净去极化的估计,该分析表明,在重复刺激期间,突触处理在超颗粒层中受到最深刻的影响,超颗粒层中包含大量皮质皮质连接。层状 CSD 和尖峰活动的时间演化的直接比较表明,刺激重复首先影响超颗粒层的突触电流,这导致了整个层的刺激诱发尖峰的减少。总之,这些结果表明,重复会引起皮层内处理的改变状态,从而支持视觉适应。我们的生存依赖于我们的大脑迅速适应不断变化的环境。一种研究得很好的适应形式发生在我们反复遇到相同或相似的刺激时。我们表明,这种与重复相关的适应是由初级视觉皮层层状皮质微电路中感觉激活流的系统变化支持的。这些结果表明了适应如何影响皮层电路之间的神经元相互作用。