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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 85 No. 1 January 2001, pp. 219-234
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, Buffalo, New York 14214
Bender, D. B. and
M. Youakim.
Effect of Attentive Fixation in Macaque Thalamus and Cortex. J. Neurophysiol. 85: 219-234, 2001. Attentional modulation of neuronal responsiveness is common in many
areas of visual cortex. We examined whether attentional modulation in
the visual thalamus was quantitatively similar to that in cortex.
Identical procedures and apparatus were used to compare attentional
modulation of single neurons in seven different areas of the visual
system: the lateral geniculate, three visual subdivisions of the
pulvinar [inferior, lateral, dorsomedial part of lateral pulvinar
(Pdm)], and three areas of extrastriate cortex representing early,
intermediate, and late stages of cortical processing (V2, V4/PM, area
7a). A simple fixation task controlled transitions among three
attentive states. The animal waited for a fixation point to appear
(ready state), fixated the point until it dimmed (fixation state), and
then waited idly to begin the next trial (idle state). Attentional
modulation was estimated by flashing an identical, irrelevant stimulus
in a neuron's receptive field during each of the three states; the
three responses defined a "response vector" whose deviation from
the line of equal response in all three states (the main diagonal)
indicated the character and magnitude of attentional modulation.
Attentional modulation was present in all visual areas except the
lateral geniculate, indicating that modulation was of central origin.
Prevalence of modulation was modest (26%) in pulvinar, and increased
from 21% in V2 to 43% in 7a. Modulation had a push-pull character (as
many cells facilitated as suppressed) with respect to the fixation state in all areas except Pdm where all cells were suppressed during
fixation. The absolute magnitude of attentional modulation, measured by
the angle between response vector and main diagonal expressed as a
percent of the maximum possible angle, differed among brain areas.
Magnitude of modulation was modest in the pulvinar (19-26%), and
increased from 22% in V2 to 41% in 7a. However, average
trial-to-trial variability of response, measured by the coefficient of
variation, also increased across brain areas so that its difference
among areas accounted for more than 90% of the difference in
modulation magnitude among areas. We also measured attentional
modulation by the ratio of cell discharge due to attention divided by
discharge variability. The resulting signal-to-noise ratio of attention
was small and constant, 1.3 ± 10%, across all areas of pulvinar
and cortex. We conclude that the pulvinar, but not the lateral
geniculate, is as strongly affected by attentional state as any area of
visual cortex we studied and that attentional modulation amplitude is
closely tied to intrinsic variability of response.
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