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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 82 No. 5 November 1999, pp. 2182-2196
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Neurology and Neuroscience, Joan and Sanford I. Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, New York 10021
Schiff, N. D.,
K. P. Purpura, and
J. D. Victor.
Gating of Local Network Signals Appears as Stimulus-Dependent
Activity Envelopes in Striate Cortex. J. Neurophysiol. 82: 2182-2196, 1999. Neuronal activity often is treated
as a composition of a stimulus-driven component and a second component
that corrupts the signal, adding or deleting spikes at random. Standard
quantitative methods such as peristimulus histograms and Fourier
analysis use stimulus-locked averaging to enhance detection of the
driven component of neuronal responses and de-emphasize the
"noise." However, neural activity also includes bursts,
oscillations, and other episodic events that standard averaging methods
overlook. If this activity is stimulus independent, it can be
characterized by standard power spectral analysis (or autocorrelation).
But activity that is excited by (but not temporally locked to) the
visual stimulus cannot be characterized by averaging or standard
spectral analysis. Phase-locked spectral analysis (PLSA) is a new
method that examines this "residual" activity
the difference
between the individual responses to each cycle of a periodic stimulus
and their average. With PLSA, residual activity is characterized in
terms of temporal envelopes and their carriers. Previously, PLSA
demonstrated broadband interactions between periodic visual stimuli and
fluctuations in the local field potential of macaque V1. In the present
study, single-unit responses (SUA) from parafoveal V1 in anesthetized
macaque monkey are examined with this technique. Recordings were made
from 21 neurons, 6 of which were recorded in pairs along with multiunit activity (MUA) from separate electrodes and 8 of which were recorded along with MUA from the same electrode. PLSA was applied to responses to preferred (orientation, direction, and spatial frequency) and nonpreferred drifting gratings. For preferred stimuli, all cells demonstrated broadband (1-10 Hz and higher) residual activity that
waxed and waned with the stimulus cycle, suggesting that changes in the
residual activity are introduced routinely by visual stimulation.
Moreover, some reconstructed envelopes indicate that the residual
activity was sharply gated by the stimulus cycle. Oscillations
occasionally were seen in the power spectrum of single units.
Phase-locked cross-spectra were determined for 3 SUA/SUA pairs and 11 SUA/MUA pairs. Residual activity in the cross-spectra was generally
much less than the residual activity determined separately from each
neuron. The reduction in the residual activity in the cross-spectra
suggests that nearby neurons may gate inputs from distinct and
relatively independent neuronal subpopulations that together generate
the background rhythms of striate cortex.
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