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The logic of recurrent circuits in the primary visual cortex

Neuroscience

The logic of recurrent circuits in the primary visual cortex

I. A. Oldenburg, W. D. Hendricks, et al.

Explore how recurrent cortical activity in the mouse visual cortex influences visual perception by refining and amplifying sensory input. This groundbreaking study, conducted by Ian Antón Oldenburg and colleagues, sheds light on the interplay between spatial arrangement and visual feature preference of neurons, revealing the complex dynamics of visual processing.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Recurrent cortical activity sculpts visual perception by refining, amplifying or suppressing visual input. However, the rules that govern the influence of recurrent activity remain enigmatic. We used ensemble-specific two-photon optogenetics in the mouse visual cortex to isolate the impact of recurrent activity from external visual input. We found that the spatial arrangement and the visual feature preference of the stimulated ensemble and the neighboring neurons jointly determine the net effect of recurrent activity. Photoactivation of these ensembles drives suppression in all cells beyond 30 µm but uniformly drives activation in closer similarly tuned cells. In nonsimilarly tuned cells, compact, cotuned ensembles drive net suppression, while diffuse, cotuned ensembles drive activation. Computational modeling suggests that highly local recurrent excitatory connectivity and selective convergence onto inhibitory neurons explain these effects. Our findings reveal a straightforward logic in which space and feature preference of cortical ensembles determine their impact on local recurrent activity.
Publisher
Nature Neuroscience
Published On
Jan 03, 2024
Authors
Ian Antón Oldenburg, William D. Hendricks, Gregory Handy, Kiarash Shamardani, Hayley A. Bounds, Brent Doiron, Hillel Adesnik
Tags
recurrent activity
visual perception
cortex
optogenetics
neuroscience
computational modeling
excitatory connectivity
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