The Role of Feedback in Shaping the Extra-Classical Receptive Field of Cortical Neurons: A Recurrent Network Model
Open Access
- 6 September 2006
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 26 (36) , 9117-9129
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.1253-06.2006
Abstract
The responses of neurons in sensory cortices are affected by the spatial context within which stimuli are embedded. In the primary visual cortex (V1), orientation-selective responses to stimuli in the receptive field (RF) center are suppressed by similarly oriented stimuli in the RF surround. Surround suppression, a likely neural correlate of perceptual figure–ground segregation, is traditionally thought to be generated within V1 by long-range horizontal connections. Recently however, it has been shown that these connections are too short and too slow to mediate fast suppression from distant regions of the RF surround. We use an anatomically and physiologically constrained recurrent network model of macaque V1 to show how interareal feedback connections, which are faster and longer-range than horizontal connections, can generate “far” surround suppression. We provide a novel solution to the puzzle of how surround suppression can arise from excitatory feedback axons contacting predominantly excitatory neurons in V1. The basic mechanism involves divergent feedback connections from the far surround targeting pyramidal neurons sending monosynaptic horizontal connections to excitatory and inhibitory neurons in the RF center. One of several predictions of our model is that the “suppressive far surround” is not always suppressive, but can facilitate the response of the RF center, depending on the amount of excitatory drive to the local inhibitors. Our model provides a general mechanism of how top-down feedback signals directly contribute to generating cortical neuron responses to simple sensory stimuli.Keywords
This publication has 77 references indexed in Scilit:
- Contribution of feedforward thalamic afferents and corticogeniculate feedback to the spatial summation area of macaque V1 and LGNJournal of Comparative Neurology, 2006
- Retinotopic Axis Specificity and Selective Clustering of Feedback Projections from V2 to V1 in the Owl MonkeyJournal of Neuroscience, 2005
- Routing of spike series by dynamic circuits in the hippocampusNature, 2004
- Local Signals From Beyond the Receptive Fields of Striate Cortical NeuronsJournal of Neurophysiology, 2003
- Target and temporal pattern selection at neocortical synapses.Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2002
- Nature and Interaction of Signals From the Receptive Field Center and Surround in Macaque V1 NeuronsJournal of Neurophysiology, 2002
- Selectivity and Spatial Distribution of Signals From the Receptive Field Surround in Macaque V1 NeuronsJournal of Neurophysiology, 2002
- An Amplitude Equation Approach to Contextual Effects in Visual CortexNeural Computation, 2002
- A local circuit approach to understanding integration of long-range inputs in primary visual cortexCerebral Cortex, 1998
- Contrast dependence of contextual effects in primate visual cortexNature, 1997