Abstract
SUMMARYWhich patterns of neural activity in sensory cortex are relevant for perceptual decision-making? To address this question, we used simultaneous two-photon calcium imaging and targeted two-photon optogenetics to probe barrel cortex activity during a perceptual discrimination task. Head-fixed mice discriminated bilateral whisker deflections and reported decisions by licking left or right. Two-photon calcium imaging revealed sparse coding of contralateral and ipsilateral whisker input in layer 2/3 while most neurons did not show task-related activity. Activating small groups of pyramidal neurons using two-photon holographic photostimulation evoked a perceptual bias that scaled with the number of neurons photostimulated. This effect was dominated by the optogenetic activation of a small number of non-coding neurons, which did not show sensory or motor-related activity during task performance. Patterned photostimulation also revealed potent recruitment of cortical inhibition during sensory processing, which strongly and preferentially suppressed non-coding neurons. Our results provide a novel perspective on the circuit basis for the sparse coding model of somatosensory processing in which a pool of non-coding neurons, selectively suppressed by strong network inhibition during whisker stimulation, can be recruited to enhance perception.HighlightsAll-optical interrogation of barrel cortex during bilateral whisker discriminationSparse coding of contralateral and ipsilateral whisker informationSelective sensory-evoked inhibition helps ensure sparse codingOptogenetic recruitment of stimulus non-coding neurons can aid perception
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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