Multiple objects evoke fluctuating responses in several regions of the visual pathway

Author:

Schmehl Meredith N123ORCID,Caruso Valeria C4ORCID,Chen Yunran5,Jun Na Young13ORCID,Willett Shawn M6,Mohl Jeff T7,Ruff Douglas A8,Cohen Marlene8ORCID,Ebihara Akinori F9,Freiwald Winrich A9ORCID,Tokdar Surya T35,Groh Jennifer M1231011ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurobiology, Duke University

2. Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University

3. Duke Institute for Brain Sciences, Duke University

4. Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan

5. Department of Statistical Science, Duke University

6. Department of Ophthalmology, University of Pittsburgh

7. American Medical Group Association

8. Department of Neurobiology, University of Chicago

9. The Rockefeller University

10. Department of Psychology & Neuroscience, Duke University

11. Department of Computer Science, Duke University

Abstract

How neural representations preserve information about multiple stimuli is mysterious. Because tuning of individual neurons is coarse (e.g., visual receptive field diameters can exceed perceptual resolution), the populations of neurons potentially responsive to each individual stimulus can overlap, raising the question of how information about each item might be segregated and preserved in the population. We recently reported evidence for a potential solution to this problem: when two stimuli were present, some neurons in the macaque visual cortical areas V1 and V4 exhibited fluctuating firing patterns, as if they responded to only one individual stimulus at a time (Jun et al., 2022). However, whether such an information encoding strategy is ubiquitous in the visual pathway and thus could constitute a general phenomenon remains unknown. Here, we provide new evidence that such fluctuating activity is also evoked by multiple stimuli in visual areas responsible for processing visual motion (middle temporal visual area, MT), and faces (middle fundus and anterolateral face patches in inferotemporal cortex – areas MF and AL), thus extending the scope of circumstances in which fluctuating activity is observed. Furthermore, consistent with our previous results in the early visual area V1, MT exhibits fluctuations between the representations of two stimuli when these form distinguishable objects but not when they fuse into one perceived object, suggesting that fluctuating activity patterns may underlie visual object formation. Taken together, these findings point toward an updated model of how the brain preserves sensory information about multiple stimuli for subsequent processing and behavioral action.

Funder

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

National Eye Institute

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

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