Department of Vision & Cognition, Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, Meibergdreef 47, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Department of Neuroscience, Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
Nat Commun. 2024 Oct 23;15(1):9115. doi: 10.1038/s41467-024-53256-8.
Cortical feedback connections are extremely numerous but the logic of connectivity between higher and lower areas remains poorly understood. Feedback from higher visual areas to primary visual cortex (V1) has been shown to enhance responses on perceptual figures compared to backgrounds, an effect known as figure-background modulation (FBM). A likely source of this feedback are border-ownership (BO) selective cells in mid-tier visual areas (e.g. V4) which represent the location of figures. We examined the connectivity between V4 cells and V1 cells using noise-correlations and micro-stimulation to estimate connectivity strength. We show that connectivity is consistent with a model in which BO-tuned V4 cells send positive feedback in the direction of their preferred figure and negative feedback in the opposite direction. This connectivity scheme can recreate patterns of FBM observed in previous studies. These results provide insights into the cortical connectivity underlying figure-background perception and establish a link between FBM and BO-tuning.
皮层反馈连接非常丰富,但高级和低级区域之间的连接逻辑仍知之甚少。已经证明,来自高级视觉区域到初级视觉皮层(V1)的反馈会增强与背景相比的感知图形的反应,这种效应称为图形-背景调制(FBM)。这种反馈的一个可能来源是中层视觉区域(如 V4)的边界所有权(BO)选择性细胞,它们代表图形的位置。我们使用噪声相关和微刺激来检查 V4 细胞和 V1 细胞之间的连接,以估计连接强度。我们表明,这种连接与一个模型一致,该模型认为 BO 调谐的 V4 细胞在其偏好的图形方向上发送正反馈,在相反方向上发送负反馈。这种连接方案可以再现先前研究中观察到的 FBM 模式。这些结果提供了对图形-背景感知背后的皮层连接的深入了解,并在 FBM 和 BO 调谐之间建立了联系。