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Relating Information, Encoding and Adaptation: Decoding the Population Firing Rate in Visual Areas 17/18 in Response to a Stimulus Transition

Neurons in the primary visual cortex typically reach their highest firing rate after an abrupt image transition. Since the mutual information between the firing rate and the currently presented image is largest during this early firing period it is tempting to conclude this early firing encodes the...

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Autores principales: Eriksson, David, Valentiniene, Sonata, Papaioannou, Stylianos
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2860500/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20436907
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010327
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author Eriksson, David
Valentiniene, Sonata
Papaioannou, Stylianos
author_facet Eriksson, David
Valentiniene, Sonata
Papaioannou, Stylianos
author_sort Eriksson, David
collection PubMed
description Neurons in the primary visual cortex typically reach their highest firing rate after an abrupt image transition. Since the mutual information between the firing rate and the currently presented image is largest during this early firing period it is tempting to conclude this early firing encodes the current image. This view is, however, made more complicated by the fact that the response to the current image is dependent on the preceding image. Therefore we hypothesize that neurons encode a combination of current and previous images, and that the strength of the current image relative to the previous image changes over time. The temporal encoding is interesting, first, because neurons are, at different time points, sensitive to different features such as luminance, edges and textures; second, because the temporal evolution provides temporal constraints for deciphering the instantaneous population activity. To study the temporal evolution of the encoding we presented a sequence of 250 ms stimulus patterns during multiunit recordings in areas 17 and 18 of the anaesthetized ferret. Using a novel method we decoded the pattern given the instantaneous population-firing rate. Following a stimulus transition from stimulus A to B the decoded stimulus during the first 90ms was more correlated with the difference between A and B (B-A) than with B alone. After 90ms the decoded stimulus was more correlated with stimulus B than with B-A. Finally we related our results to information measures of previous (B) and current stimulus (A). Despite that the initial transient conveys the majority of the stimulus-related information; we show that it actually encodes a difference image which can be independent of the stimulus. Only later on, spikes gradually encode the stimulus more exclusively.
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spelling pubmed-28605002010-04-30 Relating Information, Encoding and Adaptation: Decoding the Population Firing Rate in Visual Areas 17/18 in Response to a Stimulus Transition Eriksson, David Valentiniene, Sonata Papaioannou, Stylianos PLoS One Research Article Neurons in the primary visual cortex typically reach their highest firing rate after an abrupt image transition. Since the mutual information between the firing rate and the currently presented image is largest during this early firing period it is tempting to conclude this early firing encodes the current image. This view is, however, made more complicated by the fact that the response to the current image is dependent on the preceding image. Therefore we hypothesize that neurons encode a combination of current and previous images, and that the strength of the current image relative to the previous image changes over time. The temporal encoding is interesting, first, because neurons are, at different time points, sensitive to different features such as luminance, edges and textures; second, because the temporal evolution provides temporal constraints for deciphering the instantaneous population activity. To study the temporal evolution of the encoding we presented a sequence of 250 ms stimulus patterns during multiunit recordings in areas 17 and 18 of the anaesthetized ferret. Using a novel method we decoded the pattern given the instantaneous population-firing rate. Following a stimulus transition from stimulus A to B the decoded stimulus during the first 90ms was more correlated with the difference between A and B (B-A) than with B alone. After 90ms the decoded stimulus was more correlated with stimulus B than with B-A. Finally we related our results to information measures of previous (B) and current stimulus (A). Despite that the initial transient conveys the majority of the stimulus-related information; we show that it actually encodes a difference image which can be independent of the stimulus. Only later on, spikes gradually encode the stimulus more exclusively. Public Library of Science 2010-04-27 /pmc/articles/PMC2860500/ /pubmed/20436907 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010327 Text en Eriksson et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Eriksson, David
Valentiniene, Sonata
Papaioannou, Stylianos
Relating Information, Encoding and Adaptation: Decoding the Population Firing Rate in Visual Areas 17/18 in Response to a Stimulus Transition
title Relating Information, Encoding and Adaptation: Decoding the Population Firing Rate in Visual Areas 17/18 in Response to a Stimulus Transition
title_full Relating Information, Encoding and Adaptation: Decoding the Population Firing Rate in Visual Areas 17/18 in Response to a Stimulus Transition
title_fullStr Relating Information, Encoding and Adaptation: Decoding the Population Firing Rate in Visual Areas 17/18 in Response to a Stimulus Transition
title_full_unstemmed Relating Information, Encoding and Adaptation: Decoding the Population Firing Rate in Visual Areas 17/18 in Response to a Stimulus Transition
title_short Relating Information, Encoding and Adaptation: Decoding the Population Firing Rate in Visual Areas 17/18 in Response to a Stimulus Transition
title_sort relating information, encoding and adaptation: decoding the population firing rate in visual areas 17/18 in response to a stimulus transition
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2860500/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20436907
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010327
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