Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6277878 Neuroscience 2009 18 Pages PDF
Abstract
In anesthetized and immobilized domestic cats, we have studied the effects of brief reversible inactivation (by cooling to 10 °C) of the ipsilateral or contralateral postero-temporal visual (PTV) cortices on: 1) the magnitude of spike-responses of neurons in striate cortex (cytoarchitectonic area 17, area V1) to optimized sine-wave modulated contrast-luminosity gratings confined to the classical receptive fields (CRFs) and 2) the relative strengths of modulation of CRF-induced spike-responses by gratings extending into the extra-classical receptive field (ECRF). Consistent with our previous reports (Bardy et al., 2006; Huang et al., 2007), inactivation of ipsilateral PTV cortex (presumed homologue of primate infero-temporal cortex) resulted in significant reversible changes (almost all substantial reductions) in the magnitude of spike-responses to CRF-confined stimuli in about half of the V1 neurones. Similarly, in half of the present sample, inactivation of ipsilateral PTV cortex resulted in significant reversible changes (in over 70% of cases, reduction) in the relative strength of ECRF modulation of the CRF-induced spike-responses. By contrast, despite the fact that receptive fields of all V1 cells tested were located within 5° of representation of the zero vertical meridian, inactivation of contralateral PTV cortex only rarely resulted in significant (yet invariably small) changes in the magnitude of spike-responses to CRF-confined stimuli or significant (again invariably small) changes in the relative strength of ECRF modulation of spike-responses. Thus, the ipsilateral, but not contralateral, 'higher-order' visual cortical areas make significant contribution not only to the magnitude of CRF-induced spike-responses but also to the relative strengths of ECRF-induced modulation of the spike-responses of V1 neurons. Therefore, the feedback signals originating from the ipsilateral higher-order cortical areas appear to make an important contribution to contextual modulation of responses of neurons in the primary visual cortices.
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Life Sciences Neuroscience Neuroscience (General)
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