Department of Biological Structure, Washington National Primate Research Center, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195
Department of Biological Structure, Washington National Primate Research Center, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195.
J Neurosci. 2022 Aug 17;42(33):6408-6423. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1386-21.2022. Epub 2022 Jul 15.
Feature selectivity of visual cortical responses measured during passive fixation provides only a partial view of selectivity because it does not account for the influence of cognitive factors. Here we focus on primate area V4 and ask how neuronal tuning is modulated by task engagement. We investigated whether responses to colored shapes during active shape discrimination are simple, stimulus-agnostic, scaled versions of responses during passive fixation, akin to results from attentional studies. Alternatively, responses could be subject to stimulus-specific scaling, that is, responses to different stimuli are modulated differently, resulting in changes in underlying shape/color selectivity. Among 83 well-isolated V4 neurons in two male macaques, only a minority (16 of 83), which were weakly tuned to both shape and color, displayed responses during fixation and discrimination tasks that could be related by stimulus-agnostic scaling. The majority (67 of 83), which were strongly tuned to shape, color, or both, displayed stimulus-dependent response changes during discrimination. For some of these neurons (39 of 83), the shape or color of the stimulus dictated the magnitude of the change, and for others (28 of 83) it was the combination of stimulus shape and color. Importantly, for neurons with one strong and one weak tuning dimension, stimulus-dependent response changes during discrimination were associated with a relative increase in selectivity along the stronger tuning dimension, without changes in tuning peak. These results reveal that more strongly tuned V4 neurons may also be more flexible in their selectivity, and imbalances in selectivity are amplified during active task contexts. Tuning for stimulus features is typically characterized by recording responses during passive fixation, but cognitive factors, including attention, influence responses in visual cortex. To determine how behavioral engagement influences neuronal responses in area V4, we compared responses to colored shapes during passive fixation and active behavior. For a large fraction of neurons, differences in responses between passive fixation and active behavior depended on the identity of the visual stimulus. For a subgroup of strongly feature-selective neurons, this response modulation was associated with enhanced selectivity for one feature at the expense of selectivity for the other. Such flexibility in tuning strength could improve performance in tasks requiring active judgment of stimuli.
在被动注视期间测量的视觉皮层反应的特征选择性仅提供了选择性的部分视图,因为它没有考虑认知因素的影响。在这里,我们专注于灵长类动物的 V4 区域,并询问任务参与如何调节神经元调谐。我们调查了在主动形状识别过程中对彩色形状的反应是否是被动注视期间反应的简单、与刺激无关的缩放版本,类似于注意力研究的结果。或者,反应可能受到刺激特异性缩放的影响,也就是说,对不同刺激的反应以不同的方式进行调制,导致基础形状/颜色选择性发生变化。在两只雄性猕猴的 83 个分离良好的 V4 神经元中,只有少数(83 个中的 16 个)对形状和颜色都有弱调谐,在注视和辨别任务期间显示的反应可以通过与刺激无关的缩放相关联。大多数(83 个中的 67 个)对形状、颜色或两者都有强烈调谐的神经元在辨别过程中显示出与刺激相关的反应变化。对于其中一些神经元(83 个中的 39 个),刺激的形状或颜色决定了变化的幅度,而对于其他神经元(83 个中的 28 个),则是刺激形状和颜色的组合。重要的是,对于具有一个强和一个弱调谐维度的神经元,在辨别过程中与刺激相关的反应变化与沿较强调谐维度的选择性相对增加相关,而调谐峰值没有变化。这些结果表明,调谐更强的 V4 神经元在选择性方面可能也更灵活,并且在主动任务环境中,选择性不平衡会被放大。特征刺激的调谐通常通过在被动注视期间记录反应来描述,但认知因素,包括注意力,会影响视觉皮层的反应。为了确定行为参与如何影响 V4 区域的神经元反应,我们比较了在被动注视和主动行为期间对彩色形状的反应。对于很大一部分神经元,被动注视和主动行为之间反应的差异取决于视觉刺激的身份。对于一组特征选择性较强的神经元,这种反应调制与一种特征的选择性增强相关,而牺牲了另一种特征的选择性。这种调谐强度的灵活性可以提高需要主动判断刺激的任务的性能。