Institute of Neuroinformatics, D-ITET, ETH Zurich and UZH, 8057 Zurich, Switzerland
ETH Zurich & University of Zurich, ZNZ Neuroscience Center Zurich, 8057 Zurich, Switzerland.
J Neurosci. 2023 Jun 14;43(24):4418-4433. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1714-22.2023. Epub 2023 May 11.
Automatic detection of a surprising change in the sensory input is a central element of exogenous attentional control. Stimulus-specific adaptation (SSA) is a potential neuronal mechanism detecting such changes and has been robustly described across sensory modalities and different instances of the ascending sensory pathways. However, little is known about the relationship of SSA to perception. To assess how deviating stimuli influence target signal detection, we used a behavioral cross-modal paradigm in mice and combined it with extracellular recordings from the primary somatosensory whisker cortex. In this paradigm, male mice performed a visual detection task while task-irrelevant whisker stimuli were either presented as repetitive "standard" or as rare deviant stimuli. We found a deviance distraction effect on the animals' performance: Faster reaction times but worsened target detection was observed in the presence of a deviant stimulus. Multiunit activity and local field potentials exhibited enhanced neuronal responses to deviant compared with standard whisker stimuli across all cortical layers, as a result of SSA. The deviant-triggered behavioral distraction correlated with these enhanced neuronal deviant responses only in the deeper cortical layers. However, the layer-specific effect of SSA on perception reduced with increasing task experience as a result of statistical distractor learning. These results demonstrate a layer-specific involvement of SSA on perception that is susceptible to modulation over time. Detecting sudden changes in our immediate environment is behaviorally relevant and important for efficient perceptual processing. However, the connection between the underpinnings of cortical deviance detection and perception remains unknown. Here, we investigate how the cortical representation of deviant whisker stimuli impacts visual target detection by recording local field potential and multiunit activity in the primary somatosensory cortex of mice engaged in a cross-modal visual detection task. We find that deviant whisker stimuli distract animals in their task performance, which correlates with enhanced neuronal responses for deviants in a layer-specific manner. Interestingly, this effect reduces with the increased experience of the animal as a result of distractor learning on statistical regularities.
自动检测感觉输入中的意外变化是外源性注意控制的核心要素。刺激特异性适应(SSA)是一种潜在的神经元机制,可以检测到这种变化,并在不同的感觉模态和不同的上升感觉途径中得到了强有力的描述。然而,对于 SSA 与感知的关系知之甚少。为了评估偏离刺激如何影响目标信号检测,我们使用了一种跨模态的行为范式在小鼠中,并将其与初级体感触须皮层的细胞外记录相结合。在这个范式中,雄性小鼠执行视觉检测任务,而与任务无关的触须刺激要么作为重复的“标准”刺激呈现,要么作为罕见的偏离刺激呈现。我们发现动物的表现存在偏离干扰效应:在存在偏离刺激的情况下,反应时间更快,但目标检测更差。多单位活动和局部场电位显示,与标准触须刺激相比,所有皮层层中的偏离刺激引起的神经元反应增强,这是 SSA 的结果。偏离触发的行为分心与这些增强的神经元偏离反应相关,仅在较深的皮层层中。然而,SSA 对感知的分层效应随着任务经验的增加而降低,这是由于统计分心学习的结果。这些结果表明,SSA 对感知的分层参与是易受时间调制的。检测我们周围环境的突然变化在行为上是相关的,对有效的感知处理很重要。然而,皮层偏差检测和感知的基础之间的联系仍然未知。在这里,我们通过在参与跨模态视觉检测任务的小鼠初级体感皮层中记录局部场电位和多单位活动,研究了偏离触须刺激的皮层表示如何影响视觉目标检测。我们发现,偏离触须刺激会分散动物在任务中的注意力,这与以分层方式增强对偏离的神经元反应相关。有趣的是,这种效应随着动物经验的增加而降低,这是由于分心学习对统计规律的影响。