Affiliation:
1. State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Science, Institute of Biophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China
2. Institute of AI, Hefei Comprehensive National Science Center, Hefei 230088, China
3. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
Abstract
The covariability of neural responses in the neuron population is highly relevant to the information encoding. Cognitive processes, such as attention, are found to modulate the covariability in the visual cortex to improve information encoding, suggesting the computational advantage of covariability modulation in the neural system. However, is the covariability modulation a general mechanism for enhanced information encoding throughout the information processing pathway, or only adopted in certain processing stages, depending on the property of neural representation? Here, with ultrahigh-field MRI, we examined the covariability, which was estimated by noise correlation, in different attention states in the early visual cortex and posterior parietal cortex (PPC) of the human brain, and its relationship to the quality of information encoding. Our results showed that while attention decreased the covariability to improve the stimulus encoding in the early visual cortex, covariability modulation was not observed in the PPC, where covariability had little impact on information encoding. Further, attention promoted the information flow between the early visual cortex and PPC, with an apparent emphasis on a flow from high- to low-dimensional representations, suggesting the existence of a reduction in the dimensionality of neural representation from the early visual cortex to PPC. Finally, the neural response patterns in the PPC could predict the amplitudes of covariability change in the early visual cortex, indicating a top–down control from the PPC to early visual cortex. Our findings reveal the specific roles of the sensory cortex and PPC during attentional modulation of covariability, determined by the complexity and fidelity of the neural representation in each cortical region.
Funder
Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China
CAS | BFSE | Key Research Program of Frontier Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences
CAS Project for Young Scientists in Basic Research
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
5 articles.
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