Richmond B J, Wurtz R H, Sato T
J Neurophysiol. 1983 Dec;50(6):1415-32. doi: 10.1152/jn.1983.50.6.1415.
We studied the responses to visual stimuli of neurons in area TE of the inferior temporal (IT) cortex in four awake monkeys (Macaca mulatta) trained to perform behavioral tasks. While the monkey looked at a fixation point in order to detect its dimming, another stimulus, such as a spot of light or a sine- or square-wave grating, usually produced only slight responses in inferior temporal neurons. However, the response to the stimulus was more vigorous if the task was changed so the fixation point blinked off before the stimulus came on while the monkey maintained its gaze. Responses to visual stimuli during this blink task were seen in 199 of 288 cells studied, and nearly all responded to a visual stimulus better during the blink task than during the task in which the fixation point remained on. Small spots of light usually produced consistent responses; we did not explore the response to complex stimuli or to objects. Latency of the visual response ranged from 70 to 220 ms. While the response of cells to a stimulus in the presence of the fixation point was limited to areas near the fovea, this apparently constricted visual receptive field expanded during the blink of the fixation point. In order to determine whether the increased response of the cell in the absence of the fixation point was due to a shift of attention from the fixation point to the visual stimulus, we required the monkey to respond to the dimming of this stimulus rather than to the dimming of the fixation point. We found that attention to the visual stimulus decreased the response of the cell during both the fixation and blink tasks. That is, the best response to the stimulus occurred in the blink task when attention to the stimulus was not required, while the poorest response occurred in the fixation task when attention to the stimulus was required. The reappearance of the fixation point during stimulus presentation in the blink task caused a transient time-locked suppression of response to the stimulus. This suggests that the reduction of response to the stimulus in the presence of the fixation point is caused by an interaction between the responses to the fixation point and the visual stimulus. To insure that we were recording from the same population of cells that had first been characterized by Gross, Rocha-Miranda, and Bender (14) in anesthetized, paralyzed monkeys, we recorded under those same conditions in two of our four monkeys.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
我们研究了4只经过行为任务训练的清醒猕猴(恒河猴)颞下回(IT)皮质颞叶内侧区(TE)神经元对视觉刺激的反应。当猴子注视一个固定点以检测其变暗时,另一个刺激,如一个光点或正弦或方波光栅,通常只会在颞下神经元中产生轻微反应。然而,如果改变任务,使固定点在刺激出现之前熄灭,而猴子保持注视,则对刺激的反应会更强烈。在研究的288个细胞中,有199个细胞在这个眨眼任务中对视觉刺激有反应,并且几乎所有细胞在眨眼任务中对视觉刺激的反应都比对固定点保持点亮时的任务反应更好。小光点通常会产生一致的反应;我们没有探究对复杂刺激或物体的反应。视觉反应的潜伏期在70到220毫秒之间。虽然细胞在固定点存在时对刺激的反应仅限于中央凹附近的区域,但在固定点眨眼期间,这个明显受限的视觉感受野会扩大。为了确定在没有固定点时细胞反应增加是否是由于注意力从固定点转移到了视觉刺激上,我们要求猴子对这个刺激的变暗而不是对固定点的变暗做出反应。我们发现,在固定任务和眨眼任务中,对视觉刺激的注意力都会降低细胞的反应。也就是说,对刺激的最佳反应发生在不需要对刺激进行注意力集中的眨眼任务中,而最差反应发生在需要对刺激进行注意力集中的固定任务中。在眨眼任务中刺激呈现期间固定点的重新出现会导致对刺激反应的短暂时间锁定抑制。这表明在固定点存在时对刺激反应的降低是由对固定点和视觉刺激的反应之间的相互作用引起的。为确保我们记录的是最初由格罗斯、罗查 - 米兰达和本德(14)在麻醉、瘫痪的猴子中所表征的同一群细胞,我们在四只猴子中的两只猴子身上在相同条件下进行了记录。(摘要截取自400字)