Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6203471 Vision Research 2014 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•V1 neurons can be classified into three categories based on contrast-dependent spatial summation.•The three categories significantly differ in CRF properties.•The majority of V1 neurons have stable F1/F0 ratios under different contrast.•No significant difference was found in the CRF size between simple and complex cells.•The complex cells have larger peak firing rate than that of simple cells.

The spatial summation of excitation and inhibition determines the final output of neurons in the cat V1. To characterize the spatial extent of the excitatory classical receptive field (CRF) and inhibitory non-classical receptive field (nCRF) areas, we examined the spatial summation properties of 169 neurons in cat V1 at high (20-90%) and low (5-15%) stimulus contrasts. Three categories were classified based on the difference in the contrast dependency of the surround suppression. We discovered that the three categories significantly differed in CRF size, peak firing rate, and the proportion of simple/complex cell number. The classification of simple and complex cells was determined at both high and low contrasts. While the majority of V1 neurons had stable modulation ratios in their responses, 10 cells (6.2%) in our sample crossed the classification boundary under different stimulus contrasts. No significant difference was found in the size of the CRF between simple and complex cells. Further comparisons in each category determined that the CRFs for complex cells were significantly larger than those for simple cells in category type I neurons, with no significant differences between simple and complex cells in category type II and type III neurons. In addition, complex cells have higher peak firing rates than simple cells.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Sensory Systems
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