Abstract

Background Sensory cortex often undergoes population activity fluctuations due to attentional modulations and arousal changes, but activity fluctuations can also be generated intrinsically. The mechanisms that underlie these spontaneous activity fluctuations are unknown, in particular whether they arise from common inputs or more active neuronal processes. We measured the activity of tens of V1 neurons simultaneously in monkeys stimulated with oriented visual stimuli, and found that the tuning curves (TCs) of orientation selective neurons spontaneously underwent shifts and multiplicative scalings proportional to population activity while their widths remained constant Based on this observed TC activity dependence, we constructed a precise statistical model featuring Poissonlike firing, shifts and gain modulation. The model not only accounted for neuronal co-variability but also approached the performance of state-of-art decoding methods. Surprisingly, we found that decoding performance on sensory stimuli increased with population activity, despite the fact that the stimulus was identical. Therefore, spontaneous population activity fluctuations display highly non-random features, boosting TCs by shifts and multiplicative factors that gate information processing.

Highlights

  • Sensory cortex often undergoes population activity fluctuations due to attentional modulations and arousal changes, but activity fluctuations can be generated intrinsically

  • We measured the activity of tens of V1 neurons simultaneously in monkeys stimulated with oriented visual stimuli, and found that the tuning curves (TCs) of orientation selective neurons spontaneously underwent shifts and multiplicative scalings proportional to population activity while their widths remained constant Based on this observed TC activity dependence, we constructed a precise statistical model featuring Poissonlike firing, shifts and gain modulation

  • * Correspondence: rmoreno@fsjd.org 1Research Unit, Parc Sanitari Sant Joan de Deu and Universitat de Barcelona, Esplugues de Llobregat, Barcelona, 08950, Spain Full list of author information is available at the end of the article

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Summary

Introduction

Sensory cortex often undergoes population activity fluctuations due to attentional modulations and arousal changes, but activity fluctuations can be generated intrinsically. Spontaneous population activity fluctuations boost sensory tuning curves and gate information processing From Twenty Second Annual Computational Neuroscience Meeting: CNS*2013 Paris, France. We measured the activity of tens of V1 neurons simultaneously in monkeys stimulated with oriented visual stimuli, and found that the tuning curves (TCs) of orientation selective neurons spontaneously underwent shifts and multiplicative scalings proportional to population activity while their widths remained constant Based on this observed TC activity dependence, we constructed a precise statistical model featuring Poissonlike firing, shifts and gain modulation.

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