Receptive Field Changes After Strokelike Cortical Ablation: A Role for Activation Dynamics

Author:

Sober Samuel J.12,Stark Jeanne M.2,Yamasaki Dwayne S.2,Lytton William W.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology and

2. Department of Anatomy, University of Wisconsin, William S. Middleton Veterans Hospital, Madison, Wisconsin 53706-1532

Abstract

Sober, Samuel J., Jeanne M. Stark, Dwayne S. Yamasaki, and William W. Lytton. Receptive field changes after strokelike cortical ablation: a role for activation dynamics. J. Neurophysiol. 78: 3438–3443, 1997. The reorganization of neural activity that takes place after stroke is of paramount importance in producing functional recovery. Experimental stroke models have suggested that this reorganization may have two phases, but physiology alone cannot fully resolve what causes each phase. Computer modeling suggests that these phases might involve an initial change in dynamics occurring immediately, followed by synaptic plasticity. We combined physiological recording from macaque middle temporal cortex (area MT) with a neural network computer model to examine this first phase of altered cortical function after a small, experimentally induced cortical lesion. Major receptive field (RF) changes seen in the first few days postlesion included both expansion and contraction of receptive fields. Although only expansion could be reproduced in an initial model, addition of inhibitory interneuron loss in a ring around the primary ablation, suggested by immunohistochemical examination, permitted contraction to be replicated as well. We therefore predict that this immunochemical observation reflects an immediate extension of the lesion rather than a late response. Additionally our model successfully predicted a correlation between increased firing rate and RF size. Our model suggests that activation dynamics alone, without anatomic remodeling, can cause the large receptive field changes that allow the rapid behavioral recovery seen after middle temporal lesions.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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