Abstract

Adaptation to stimulus orientation is assumed to have a cortical basis, but few studies have addressed whether it affects the activity of subcortical neurons. Using single-unit recording, we studied the effects of orientation adaptation on the responses of lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) neurons with high orientation bias (OB) in anesthetized and paralyzed cats. Following adaptation to one stimulus orientation, the response at the adapting orientation was decreased, and the preferred orientation was shifted away from the adapting orientation. This phenomenon was similar to the effects observed for orientation adaptation in the primary visual cortex (V1), and was obvious when the adapting orientation was at an appropriate location relative to the original preferred orientation. Moreover, when the V1 was inactivated, the response at the adapting orientation was also decreased but the preferred orientation did not show a systematic shift after orientation adaptation in LGN. This result indicates that cortical feedback contributes to the effect of orientation adaptation on LGN neurons, which have a high OB. These data provide an example of how the corticothalamic loop modulates the processing of visual information, and suggest that the LGN is not only a simply passive relay but also a modulator of visual information.

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