Abstract

Cue-triggered recall of learned temporal sequences is an important cognitive function that has been attributed to higher brain areas. Here, recordings in both anesthetized and awake rats demonstrate that after repeated stimulation with a moving spot that evoked sequential firing of an ensemble of primary visual cortex (V1) neurons, just a brief flash at the starting point of the motion path was sufficient to evoke a sequential firing pattern that reproduced the activation order evoked by the moving spot. The speed of recalled spike sequences may reflect the internal dynamics of the network rather than the motion speed. In awake animals, such recall was observed during a synchronized (“quiet wakeful”) brain state with large-amplitude, low-frequency local field potential (LFP), but not in a desynchronized (“active”) state with low-amplitude, high-frequency LFP. Such conditioning-enhanced, cue-evoked sequential spiking of a V1 ensemble may contribute to experience-based perceptual inference in a brain state-dependent manner.

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