Orientation-Tuned fMRI Adaptation in Human Visual Cortex

2005 ◽  
Vol 94 (6) ◽  
pp. 4188-4195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fang Fang ◽  
Scott O. Murray ◽  
Daniel Kersten ◽  
Sheng He

Adaptation is a general property of almost all neural systems and has been a longstanding tool of psychophysics because of its power to isolate and temporarily reduce the contribution of specific neural populations. Recently, adaptation designs have been extensively applied in functional MRI (fMRI) studies to infer neural selectivity in specific cortical areas. However, there has been considerable variability in the duration of adaptation used in these experiments. In particular, although long-term adaptation has been solidly established in psychophysical and neurophysiological studies, it has been incorporated into few fMRI studies. Furthermore, there has been little validation of fMRI adaptation using stimulus dimensions with well-known adaptive properties (e.g., orientation) and in better understood regions of cortex (e.g., primary visual cortex, V1). We used an event-related fMRI experiment to study long-term orientation adaptation in the human visual cortex. After long-term adaptation to an oriented pattern, the fMRI response in V1, V2, V3/VP, V3A, and V4 to a test stimulus was proportional to the angular difference between the adapting and test stimuli. However, only V3A and V4 showed this response pattern with short-term adaptation. In a separate experiment, we measured behavioral contrast detection thresholds after adaptation and found that the fMRI signal in V1 closely matched the psychophysically derived contrast detection thresholds. Similar to the fMRI results, adaptation induced threshold changes strongly depended on the duration of adaptation. In addition to supporting the existence of adaptable orientation-tuned neurons in human visual cortex, our results show the importance of considering timing parameters in fMRI adaptation experiments.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthias Fritsche ◽  
Samuel G. Solomon ◽  
Floris P. de Lange

AbstractSensory processing and perception are strongly influenced by recent stimulus history – a phenomenon termed adaptation. While perception can be influenced even by brief stimuli presented dozens of seconds ago, neural adaptation to brief stimuli has not been observed beyond time lags of a few hundred milliseconds. Here, using an openly available dataset from the Allen Brain Observatory, we show that neurons in the early visual cortex of the mouse exhibit remarkably long timescales of adaptation in response to brief visual stimuli, persisting over dozens of seconds, despite the presentation of several intervening stimuli. Long-term adaptation was selectively expressed in cortical, but not in thalamic neurons, which only showed short-term adaptation. Visual cortex thus maintains concurrent stimulus-specific memory traces of past input that enable the visual system to build up a statistical representation of the world over multiple timescales, to efficiently represent information in a changing environment.


2006 ◽  
Vol 398 (3) ◽  
pp. 220-223 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wesley C. Clapp ◽  
Suresh D. Muthukumaraswamy ◽  
Jeff P. Hamm ◽  
Tim J. Teyler ◽  
Ian J. Kirk

2001 ◽  
Vol 86 (3) ◽  
pp. 1398-1411 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sabine Kastner ◽  
Peter De Weerd ◽  
Mark A. Pinsk ◽  
M. Idette Elizondo ◽  
Robert Desimone ◽  
...  

Neurophysiological studies in monkeys show that when multiple visual stimuli appear simultaneously in the visual field, they are not processed independently, but rather interact in a mutually suppressive way. This suggests that multiple stimuli compete for neural representation. Consistent with this notion, we have previously found in humans that functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) signals in V1 and ventral extrastriate areas V2, V4, and TEO are smaller for simultaneously presented (i.e., competing) stimuli than for the same stimuli presented sequentially (i.e., not competing). Here we report that suppressive interactions between stimuli are also present in dorsal extrastriate areas V3A and MT, and we compare these interactions to those in areas V1 through TEO. To exclude the possibility that the differences in responses to simultaneously and sequentially presented stimuli were due to differences in the number of transient onsets, we tested for suppressive interactions in area V4, in an experiment that held constant the number of transient onsets. We found that the fMRI response to a stimulus in the upper visual field was suppressed by the presence of nearby stimuli in the lower visual field. Further, we excluded the possibility that the greater fMRI responses to sequential compared with simultaneous presentations were due to exogeneous attentional cueing by having our subjects count T's or L's at fixation, an attentionally demanding task. Behavioral testing demonstrated that neither condition interfered with performance of the T/L task. Our previous findings suggested that suppressive interactions among nearby stimuli in areas V1 through TEO were scaled to the receptive field (RF) sizes of neurons in those areas. Here we tested this idea by parametrically varying the spatial separation among stimuli in the display. Display sizes ranged from 2 × 2° to 7 × 7° and were centered at 5.5° eccentricity. Based on the effects of display size on the magnitude of suppressive interactions, we estimated that RF sizes at an eccentricity of 5.5° were <2° in V1, 2–4° in V2, 4–6° in V4, larger than 7° (but still confined to a quadrant) in TEO, and larger than 6° (confined to a quadrant) in V3A. These estimates of RF sizes in human visual cortex are strikingly similar to those measured in physiological mapping studies in the homologous visual areas in monkeys.


Ophthalmology ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 124 (6) ◽  
pp. 873-883 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manzar Ashtari ◽  
Elena S. Nikonova ◽  
Kathleen A. Marshall ◽  
Gloria J. Young ◽  
Puya Aravand ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (10) ◽  
pp. 291c
Author(s):  
Serra E Favila ◽  
Brice A Kuhl ◽  
Jonathan Winawer

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Serra E. Favila ◽  
Brice A. Kuhl ◽  
Jonathan Winawer

AbstractReactivation of earlier perceptual activity is thought to underlie long-term memory recall. Despite evidence for this view, it is unknown whether mnemonic activity exhibits the same tuning properties as feedforward perceptual activity. Here, we leveraged population receptive field models to parameterize fMRI activity in human visual cortex during spatial memory retrieval. Though retinotopic organization was present during both perception and memory, large systematic differences in tuning were also evident. Notably, whereas there was a three-fold decline in spatial precision from early to late visual areas during perception, this property was entirely abolished during memory retrieval. This difference could not be explained by reduced signal-to-noise or poor performance on memory trials. Instead, by simulating top-down activity in a network model of cortex, we demonstrate that this property is well-explained by the hierarchical structure of the visual system. Our results provide insight into the computational constraints governing memory reactivation in sensory cortex.


2009 ◽  
Vol 9 (13) ◽  
pp. 3-3 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Lingnau ◽  
H. Ashida ◽  
M. B. Wall ◽  
A. T. Smith

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