Abstract
The study of sensory signaling in the visual cortex has been greatly advanced by the recording of neural activity simultaneously with the performance of a specific psychophysical task. Individual nerve cells may also increase their firing leading up to the particular choice or decision made on a single psychophysical trial. Understanding these signals is important because they have been taken as evidence that a particular nerve cell or group of nerve cells in the cortex is involved in the formation of the perceptual decision ultimately signaled by the organism. However, recent analyses show that the size of a decision-related change in firing in a particular neuron is not a secure basis for concluding anything about the contribution of a single neuron to the formation of a decision: rather the size of the decision-related firing is expected to be dominated by the extent to which the activation of a single neuron is correlated with the firing of the pool of neurons. The critical question becomes what defines membership of a population of neurons. This article presents the proposal that groups of neurons are naturally linked together by their connectivity, which in turn reflects the previous history of sensory stimulations. When a new psychophysical task is performed, a group of neurons relevant to the judgment becomes involved because the firing of some neurons in that group is strongly relevant to the task. This group of neurons is called a micro-pool. This article examines the consequences of such a proposal within the visual nervous system. The main focus is on the signals available from single neurons, but it argued that models of choice-related signals must scale up to larger numbers of neurons because MRI and MEG studies also show evidence of similar choice signals.
Highlights
Understanding these signals is important because they have been taken as evidence that a particular nerve cell or group of nerve cells in the cortex is involved in the formation of the perceptual decision signaled by the organism
When a new psychophysical task is performed, a group of neurons relevant to the judgment becomes involved because the firing of some neurons in that group is strongly relevant to the task
The main focus is on the signals available from single neurons, but it argued that models of choice-related signals must scale up to larger numbers of neurons because MRI and MEG studies show evidence of similar choice signals
Summary
A single trial analysis of EEG data was used to identify choice-related brain activations during a task to discriminate faces from automobiles (Philiastides and Sajda, 2006) In this case, the combined measurement of neural and psychophysical performance showed that the neural signals had the precision to extend over the full range of human behavioral responses. Haefner et al (2013) examined the role of interneuron correlation on choice-related signals in a neural population: rather than considering the distributed activity of a population of neurons, they considered the mean behavior of a large population With this analysis, it became clear that when a neuron exhibits a choice probability, even a large one, this tells us more about which other neurons this recorded neuron is connected to, rather than revealing the presence of a subgroup neurons that are on the perceptual pathway (see Figure 1 “Interconnected”).
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