Author:
Wang Xiang,Nandy Anirvan S.,Jadi Monika P.
Abstract
AbstractAttention selectively enhances neural responses to low contrast stimuli in visual area V4, a critical hub that sends projections both up and down the visual hierarchy. Veridical encoding of contrast information is a key computation in early visual areas, while later stages encoding higher level features benefit from improved sensitivity to low contrast. How area V4 meets these distinct information processing demands in the attentive state is unknown. We found that attentional modulation in V4 is cortical layer and cell-class specific. Putative excitatory neurons in the superficial layers show enhanced boosting of low contrast information, while those of deep layers exhibit contrast-independent scaling. Computational modeling suggested the extent of spatial integration of inhibitory neurons as the mechanism behind such laminar differences. Considering that superficial neurons are known to project to higher areas and deep layers to early visual areas, our findings suggest that the interactions between attention and contrast in V4 are compartmentalized, in alignment with the demands of the visual processing hierarchy.
Funder
Yale University
Brain and Behavior Research Foundation
National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression
E. Matilda Ziegler Foundation for the Blind
National Eye Institute
National Institutes of Health
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
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