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Showing papers by "Kevan A. C. Martin published in 2015"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that a local patch of excitatory neurons has a large diversity of contrast tunings, which effectively extends the range of contrast that can be encoded instantaneously in cortex and provides new insights into the circuits and mechanisms underlying cortical adaptation and gain control.
Abstract: Sensory neurons encode stimulus intensity in their instantaneous spike rate and adjust the set-points of the stimulus–response relationships by adaptation In the visual cortex, adaptation is crucial because the mechanism of fast gain control (normalization) increases the contrast sensitivity of individual neurons at the cost of encoding a far narrower range of contrasts than is encountered in natural scenes The mechanism of adaptation, however, is a slow process and has a time constant of seconds Here we use two-photon calcium imaging of identified excitatory and inhibitory neurons in superficial layers of cat primary visual cortex to answer two questions: for a given set-point, what is range of contrasts represented within a local pool of neurons, and what accounts for the slow time constant of contrast adaptation? We found that a local patch of excitatory neurons has a large diversity of contrast tunings, which effectively extends the range of contrast that can be encoded instantaneously in cortex Additionally, we identified a pool of parvalbumin-positive GABAergic neurons and neurons in the upper tier of imaging sites that showed a paradoxical slow increase in activity during adaptation, thus implicating them in the slow set-point adaptation of the excitatory population Our results provide new insights into the circuits and mechanisms underlying cortical adaptation and gain control SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Neurons in the primary visual cortex (V1) respond near instantaneously over a limited range of contrasts but can also shift their operating range according to the average contrast of the scene This “contrast adaptation” takes 5–10 s and ensures that a full range of contrasts can be encoded in V1, while remaining sensitive to small changes in local contrast By optically recording many layer 2 neurons simultaneously, we discovered that networks of neurons collectively code for a much wider range of contrasts Whereas most neurons responded to sustained increases in contrast by decreasing their spike firing rates, two types of inhibitory neurons in the cat9s visual cortex paradoxically increased their firing rates and so could inhibit other neurons to produce contrast adaptation

22 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Kevan A. C. Martin1
19 Feb 2015-Nature

4 citations