Elsevier

NeuroImage

Volume 92, 15 May 2014, Pages 143-155
NeuroImage

Contrast gain control and horizontal interactions in V1: A DCM study

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.01.047Get rights and content
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open access

Highlights

  • A new observation model suitable for ECoG recordings.

  • An canonical microcircuit field model.

  • A DCM treatment of multiple experimental conditions and trial-specific effects.

  • Excitation-inhibition balance in terms of strength and dispersion.

Abstract

Using high-density electrocorticographic recordings – from awake-behaving monkeys – and dynamic causal modelling, we characterised contrast dependent gain control in visual cortex, in terms of synaptic rate constants and intrinsic connectivity. Specifically, we used neural field models to quantify the balance of excitatory and inhibitory influences; both in terms of the strength and spatial dispersion of horizontal intrinsic connections. Our results allow us to infer that increasing contrast increases the sensitivity or gain of superficial pyramidal cells to inputs from spiny stellate populations. Furthermore, changes in the effective spatial extent of horizontal coupling nuance the spatiotemporal filtering properties of cortical laminae in V1 — effectively preserving higher spatial frequencies. These results are consistent with recent non-invasive human studies of contrast dependent changes in the gain of pyramidal cells elaborating forward connections — studies designed to test specific hypotheses about precision and gain control based on predictive coding. Furthermore, they are consistent with established results showing that the receptive fields of V1 units shrink with increasing visual contrast.

Keywords

Neural field theory
Dynamic causal modelling
Contrast
Attention
Connectivity
Gamma oscillations
V1
Electrocorticography
Visual cortex
Electrophysiology

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Equal contribution.