Abstract

SummaryExperimental findings show the ubiquitous presence of graded responses and tuning curves in the neocortex, particularly in visual areas [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15]. Among these, inferotemporal-cortex (IT) neurons respond to complex visual stimuli, but differences in the neurons’ responses can be used to distinguish the stimuli eliciting the responses [8, 9, 16, 17, 18]. The IT projects directly to the medial temporal lobe (MTL) [19], where neurons respond selectively to different pictures of specific persons and even to their written and spoken names [20, 21, 22]. However, it is not clear whether this is done through a graded coding, as in the neocortex, or a truly invariant code, in which the response-eliciting stimuli cannot be distinguished from each other. To address this issue, we recorded single neurons during the repeated presentation of different stimuli (pictures and written and spoken names) corresponding to the same persons. Using statistical tests and a decoding approach, we found that only in a minority of cases can the different pictures of a given person be distinguished from the neurons’ responses and that in a larger proportion of cases, the responses to the pictures were different to the ones to the written and spoken names. We argue that MTL neurons tend to lack a representation of sensory features (particularly within a sensory modality), which can be advantageous for the memory function attributed to this area [23, 24, 25], and that a full representation of memories is given by a combination of mostly invariant coding in the MTL with a representation of sensory features in the neocortex.

Highlights

  • Following the idea introduced in [26], we studied whether the neurons showed neural unitization in their responses to a given identity, i.e., if individual neurons exhibited no differences in response strength or latency to the different pictures associated to a given identity

  • In previous works [20, 21], we have shown that medial temporal lobe (MTL) neurons tend to fire to pictures of specific persons, but because of the relatively low number of trials used in these studies, we could not statistically compare the responses to the different pictures of the same persons

  • In this study, we have used 30 presentations per stimulus and, in contrast to the findings in the neocortex studies described above, we have shown that MTL responses were nearly binary, meaning that response-eliciting stimuli triggered the same activations while other stimuli elicited activations at baseline levels—i.e., without showing a graded coding

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Summary

Introduction

In this case, from an average baseline firing of 3.05 Hz (SD 2.76), the neuron had an average firing of 11.67 Hz (SD 4.96) in response to these stimuli.

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