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Showing papers on "Summation published in 1999"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that the extent of spatial summation in macaque V1 neurons depended on contrast, and was on average 2.3-fold greater at low contrast.
Abstract: Stimulation outside the receptive field of a primary visual cortical (V1) neuron reveals intracortical neural interactions. However, previous investigators implicitly or explicitly considered the extent of cortical spatial summation and, therefore, the size of the classical receptive field to be fixed and independent of stimulus characteristics or of surrounding context. On the contrary, we found that the extent of spatial summation in macaque V1 neurons depended on contrast, and was on average 2.3-fold greater at low contrast. This adaptive increase in spatial summation at low contrast was seen in cells throughout V1 and was independent of surround inhibition.

626 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: By subtracting the EPSP trains evoked during Ih blockade from the control train, the time course of synaptic hyperpolarization induced by Ih deactivation was examined.
Abstract: Most mammalian central neurons receive synaptic input over complicated dendritic arbors. Therefore, timing of synaptic information should vary with synapse location. However, I report that temporal summation at CA1 pyramidal somata does not depend on the location of synaptic input. This spatial normalization of temporal integration requires a dendritic hyperpolarization-activated current (lh). Shaping of synaptic activity by deactivating a nonuniform lh could counterbalance filtering by dendrites and effectively remove location-dependent variability in temporal integration, thus enhancing synchronization of neuronal populations and functional capabilities of the hippocampal CA1 region.

584 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The model predicts that using optimum spatiotemporal summation the locust can extend its vision to light intensities more than 100,000 times dimmer than if it relied on its optics alone.

329 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Feb 1999-Neuron
TL;DR: Under a variety of stimulation regimes, this work finds a linear summation of most input combinations that is implemented by a surprising balance of boosting and shunting mechanisms, and suggests that a simple arithmetic is used by apparently complex dendritic trees.

328 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The spatial extent over which one stimulus would divide the response to another and found effective normalization from stimuli quite far removed from the RF center is found, which supports models under which normalization occurs both in MT and in earlier stages.
Abstract: Receptive fields (RFs) of cells in the middle temporal area (MT or V5) of monkeys will often encompass multiple objects under normal image viewing. We therefore have studied how multiple moving stimuli interact when presented within and near the RF of single MT cells. We used moving Gabor function stimuli, <1 degrees in spatial extent and approximately 100 msec in duration, presented on a grid of possible locations over the RF of the cell. Responses to these stimuli were typically robust, and their small spatial and temporal extent allowed detailed mapping of RFs and of interactions between stimuli. The responses to pairs of such stimuli were compared against the responses to the same stimuli presented singly. The responses were substantially less than the sum of the responses to the component stimuli and were well described by a power-law summation model with divisive inhibition. Such divisive inhibition is a key component of recently proposed "normalization" models of cortical physiology and is presumed to arise from lateral interconnections within a region. One open question is whether the normalization occurs only once in primary visual cortex or multiple times in different cortical areas. We addressed this question by exploring the spatial extent over which one stimulus would divide the response to another and found effective normalization from stimuli quite far removed from the RF center. This supports models under which normalization occurs both in MT and in earlier stages.

209 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, by subtracting the EPSP trains evoked during Ih blockade from the control train, the time course of synaptic hyperpolarization induced by Ih deactivation was examined.
Abstract: Nat. Neurosci. 2, 508–514 (1999) Because of an editorial error, the first sentence of the last paragraph on page 511 was incorrect. The sentence should read as follows: By subtracting the EPSP trains evoked during Ih blockade from the control train, the time course of synaptic hyperpolarization induced by Ih deactivation was examined.

115 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The experiments indicate that under certain conditions, both mechanisms may operate, but that the process of neural integration is an exclusive characteristic of the Pacinian (P) channel.
Abstract: Temporal summation, a decrease in the detection threshold that occurs when either the duration of a stimulus or the number of stimuli in a sequence is increased, has been attributed to the operations of either the mechanism of neural integration or of probability summation. Our experiments indicate that under certain conditions, both mechanisms may operate, but that the process of neural integration is an exclusive characteristic of the Pacinian (P) channel. The P channel was isolated by applying 250 Hz stimuli through a 1.5 cm2 contactor to the thenar eminence of the hand and the NPII channel was isolated by applying the stimuli through a 0.01 cm2 contactor. The finding that the slopes of the psychometric functions were the same within both channels indicated that probability summation could not account for temporal summation for stimulus durations less than 1 s. The finding that the threshold for the detection of multiple-pulse stimuli increased as the interpulse interval increased indicated that, for t...

61 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The combination of acoustic and trigeminal stimulation was most effective in enhancing startle amplitudes, and summation peaked when the noise burst preceded the trigemINAL stimulation by 5 ms.

40 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A model of 'physiological' integration that is based on excitatory lateral interactions in the visual cortex is explained, which explains several phenomena which are confirmed by the experimental data, such as the absence of spatial and temporal uncertainty effects, temporal summation curves, and facilitation by a pedestal in 2AFC tasks.
Abstract: Recent studies of visual detection show a configuration dependent weak improvement of thresholds with the number of targets, which corresponds to a fourth-root power law. We find this result to be inconsistent with probability summation models, and account for it by a model of 'physiological' integration that is based on excitatory lateral interactions in the visual cortex. The model explains several phenomena which are confirmed by the experimental data, such as the absence of spatial and temporal uncertainty effects, temporal summation curves, and facilitation by a pedestal in 2AFC tasks. The summation exponents are dependent on the strength of the lateral interactions, and on the distance and orientation relationship between the elements.

36 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the fovea, the phase configuration had no effect on detection threshold, suggesting a full-wave rectification operation mediating foveal spatial summation, and at 5 deg in the periphery, detection thresholds for the in-phase configuration were lower than those for the alternating-phase Configuration.
Abstract: We measured the effect of phase coherence on the detectability of a chain of Gabor patches. The stimuli were elongated patterns consisting of 1-8 vertical Gabor patches, aligned vertically and either in phase or 180 deg out of phase from their immediate neighbors. In the fovea, the phase configuration had no effect on detection threshold, suggesting a full-wave rectification operation mediating foveal spatial summation. At 5 deg in the periphery, detection thresholds for the in-phase configuration were lower than those for the alternating-phase configuration, to an extent compatible with a half-wave rectification operation mediating peripheral spatial summation.

32 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The interaction between pressure-sensitive neurons and annulus erector neuron reveals how sensory specificity, connectivity pattern and regulatory elements interplay in a specific sensory-motor network.
Abstract: We studied a specific sensory-motor pathway in the isolated leech ganglia. Pressure-sensitive mechanosensory neurons were stimulated with trains of action potentials at 5–20 Hz while recording the responses of the annulus erector motorneurons that control annuli erection. The response of the annulus erector neurons was a succession of excitatory postsynaptic potentials followed by inhibitory postsynaptic potentials. The excitatory postsynaptic potentials had a brief time-course while the inhibitory postsynaptic potentials had a prolonged time-course that enabled their temporal summation. Thus, the net effect of pressure-sensitive neuron stimulation on the annulus erector neurons was inhibitory. Both phases of the response were mediated by chemical transmission; the excitatory postsynaptic potentials were transmitted via a monosynaptic pathway, and the inhibitory postsynaptic potentials via a polysynaptic one. The pattern of expression of this dual response depended on the field of innervation of the sensory neuron and it was under the influence of cell 151, a non-spiking interneuron, that could regulate the expression of the hyperpolarization. The interaction between pressure-sensitive neurons and annulus erector neuron reveals how sensory specificity, connectivity pattern and regulatory elements interplay in a specific sensory-motor network.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present study suggests that tectal cells directly activate ION neurons and thatTectal fibers contact isthmo-optic neurons in a one-to-one fashion and appears that the entire tecto-ION-retinal pathway is excitatory.

01 Jan 1999
TL;DR: The experiments indicate that under certain conditions, both mechanisms may operate, but that the process of neural integration is an exclusive characteristic of the Pacinian (P) channel.
Abstract: Temporal summation, a decrease in the detection threshold that occurs when either the duration of a stimulus or the number of stimuli in a sequence is increased, has been attributed to the operations of either the mechanism of neural integration or of probability summation. Our experiments indicate that under certain conditions, both mechanisms may operate, but that the process of neural integration is an exclusive characteristic of the Pacinian (P) channel. The P channel was isolated by applying 250 Hz stimuli through a 1.5 cm 2 contactor to the thenar eminence of the hand and the NPII channel was isolated by applying the stimuli through a 0.01 cm 2 contactor. The finding that the slopes of the psychometric functions were the same within both channels indicated that probability summation could not account for temporal summation for stimulus durations less than 1 s. The finding that the threshold for the detection of multiple-pulse stimuli increased as the interpulse interval increased indicated that, for time intervals less than 800 ms, temporal summation results from neural integration. But for interstimulus intervals greater than 800 ms, probability summation accounts for temporal summation.