Author:
Moldakarimov Samat,Bazhenov Maxim,Feldman Daniel E.,Sejnowski Terrence J.
Abstract
Neurons responding to different whiskers are spatially intermixed in the superficial layer 2/3 (L2/3) of the rodent barrel cortex, where a single whisker deflection activates a sparse, distributed neuronal population that spans multiple cortical columns. How the superficial layer of the rodent barrel cortex is organized to support such distributed sensory representations is not clear. In a computer model, we tested the hypothesis that sensory representations in L2/3 of the rodent barrel cortex are formed by activity propagation horizontally within L2/3 from a site of initial activation. The model explained the observed properties of L2/3 neurons, including the low average response probability in the majority of responding L2/3 neurons, and the existence of a small subset of reliably responding L2/3 neurons. Sparsely propagating traveling waves similar to those observed in L2/3 of the rodent barrel cortex occurred in the model only when a subnetwork of strongly connected neurons was immersed in a much larger network of weakly connected neurons.
Funder
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
NSF | SBE | Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences
DOD | United States Navy | Office of Naval Research
Swartz Foundation
Kieckhefer Foundation
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
19 articles.
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