Rapid learning in cortical coding of visual scenes
- 29 April 2007
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Neuroscience
- Vol. 10 (6) , 772-778
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nn1895
Abstract
Experience-dependent plasticity in adult visual cortex is believed to have important roles in visual coding and perceptual learning. Here we show that repeated stimulation with movies of natural scenes induces a rapid improvement in response reliability in cat visual cortex, whereas stimulation with white noise or flashed bar stimuli does not. The improved reliability can be accounted for by a selective increase in spiking evoked by preferred stimuli, and the magnitude of improvement depends on the sparseness of the response. The increase in reliability persists for at least several minutes in the absence of further movie stimulation. During this period, spontaneous spiking activity shows detectable reverberation of the movie-evoked responses. Thus, repeated exposure to natural stimuli not only induces a rapid improvement in cortical response reliability, but also leaves a 'memory trace' in subsequent spontaneous activity.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Temporal Specificity in the Cortical Plasticity of Visual Space RepresentationScience, 2002
- Stimulus Timing-Dependent Plasticity in Cortical Processing of OrientationNeuron, 2001
- Adaptation-Induced Plasticity of Orientation Tuning in Adult Visual CortexNeuron, 2000
- Membrane Mechanisms Underlying Contrast Adaptation in Cat Area 17In VivoJournal of Neuroscience, 2000
- Rapid Adaptation in Visual Cortex to the Structure of ImagesScience, 1999
- Synaptic Depression and the Temporal Response Characteristics of V1 CellsJournal of Neuroscience, 1998
- Repetitive optical stimulation elicits fast receptive field changes in mature visual cortexNeuroReport, 1998
- A Tonic Hyperpolarization Underlying Contrast Adaptation in Cat Visual CortexScience, 1997
- Pattern-selective adaptation in visual cortical neuronesNature, 1979
- Neural Correlate of Perceptual Adaptation to GratingsScience, 1973