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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 86 No. 6 December 2001, pp. 2703-2714
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee 37235
Kabara, Joseph F. and
A.
B. Bonds.
Modification of Response Functions of Cat Visual Cortical Cells by
Spatially Congruent Perturbing Stimuli. J. Neurophysiol. 86: 2703-2714, 2001. Responses of cat
striate cortical cells to a drifting sinusoidal grating were modified
by the superimposition of a second, perturbing grating (PG) that did
not excite the cell when presented alone. One consequence of the
presence of a PG was a shift in the tuning curves. The orientation
tuning of all 41 cells exposed to a PG and the spatial frequency tuning
of 83% of the 23 cells exposed to a PG showed statistically
significant dislocations of both the response function peak and center
of mass from their single grating values. As found in earlier reports,
the presence of PGs suppressed responsiveness. However, reductions
measured at the single grating optimum orientation or spatial frequency were on average 1.3 times greater than the suppression found at the
peak of the response function modified by the presence of the PG. Much
of the loss in response seen at the single grating optimum is thus a
result of a shift in the tuning function rather than outright
suppression. On average orientation shifts were repulsive and
proportional (~0.10 deg/deg) to the angle between the perturbing
stimulus and the optimum single grating orientation. Shifts in the
spatial frequency response function were both attractive and repulsive,
resulting in an overall average of zero. For both simple and complex
cells, PGs generally broadened orientation response function
bandwidths. Similarly, complex cell spatial frequency response function
bandwidths broadened. Simple cell spatial frequency response functions
usually did not change, and those that did broadened only 4% on
average. These data support the hypothesis that additional sinusoidal
components in compound stimuli retune cells' response functions for
orientation and spatial frequency.
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