Chen Spencer C, Chen Yuzhi, Geisler Wilson S, Seidemann Eyal
Center for Perceptual Systems, University of Texas at Austin.
Center for Theoretical and Computational Neuroscience, University of Texas at Austin.
bioRxiv. 2023 Oct 30:2023.07.06.547970. doi: 10.1101/2023.07.06.547970.
Visual detection is a fundamental natural task. Detection becomes more challenging as the similarity between the target and the background in which it is embedded increases, a phenomenon termed "similarity masking". To test the hypothesis that V1 contributes to similarity masking, we used voltage sensitive dye imaging (VSDI) to measure V1 population responses while macaque monkeys performed a detection task under varying levels of target-background similarity. Paradoxically, we find that during an initial transient phase, V1 responses to the target are enhanced, rather than suppressed, by target-background similarity. This effect reverses in the second phase of the response, so that in this phase V1 signals are positively correlated with the behavioral effect of similarity. Finally, we show that a simple model with delayed divisive normalization can qualitatively account for our findings. Overall, our results support the hypothesis that a nonlinear gain control mechanism in V1 contributes to perceptual similarity masking.
视觉检测是一项基本的自然任务。随着目标与其所处背景之间的相似度增加,检测变得更具挑战性,这种现象被称为“相似性掩蔽”。为了验证初级视皮层(V1)促成相似性掩蔽这一假设,我们使用电压敏感染料成像(VSDI)来测量猕猴在不同程度的目标 - 背景相似度下执行检测任务时V1群体的反应。矛盾的是,我们发现在初始瞬态阶段,目标 - 背景相似度增强而非抑制了V1对目标的反应。这种效应在反应的第二阶段发生逆转,因此在这个阶段V1信号与相似性的行为效应呈正相关。最后,我们表明一个具有延迟除法归一化的简单模型能够定性地解释我们的发现。总体而言,我们的结果支持了这样的假设,即V1中的非线性增益控制机制促成了感知相似性掩蔽。