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J Neurophysiol (November 1, 2002). 10.1152/jn.00151.200
Submitted on 1 March 2002
Accepted on 24 July 2002
Department of Physiological Optics, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama 35294
Gawne, Timothy J. and
Julie M. Martin.
Responses of Primate Visual Cortical Neurons to Stimuli Presented
by Flash, Saccade, Blink, and External Darkening. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 2178-2186, 2002. Our visual
experience constitutes an unending chain of transient events, including
those caused by saccadic eye movements, by blinks, and by localized or
global changes in the external world. The categorical perception of
objects is maintained across different classes of transient events,
suggesting that the neural circuitry underlying visual perception
responds to different transient events in a similar manner. However,
different sorts of transients do have different perceptual impacts: for
example, the sudden changes in a scene due to a saccade or a blink do
not disturb our perceptual continuity of a visual scene as much as an
external change does. We recorded the responses of 103 single visual
cortical neurons in two rhesus monkeys (V1: n = 38, V2:
n = 19, V3V/VP: n = 30, V4V:
n = 16) to the onset and offset of a visual stimulus that was elicited by four different conditions: 1) stimulus
flashed on and off while the eyes remain fixed; 2) stimulus
turned on and off along with the entire scene (external darkening);
3) stimulus constant, onset and offset induced by rapid
saccadic eye movements; and 4) offset induced by an
eyeblink. For most neurons the onset and offset of a visual stimulus
elicited qualitatively similar responses regardless of condition. We
found no systematic effect of different conditions across the neuronal
population. Previously we have shown that when the visual scene is
occluded by a blink V1 neuronal firing declines in a similar manner as
when the external scene is darkened and the eyes left open.
Here we show that this is also the case in V2, V3V/VP, and V4V.
However, for a substantial minority of neurons, the response varied
strongly as a function of the transient event. This overall pattern was
the same in all four cortical areas studied here. We hypothesize that
most neurons in visual cortex constitute a passive "filter bank",
analyzing the scene for specific details regardless of condition.
However, there are neurons that respond in a qualitatively different
manner depending on how a stimulus is presented, and we hypothesize
that these signals may be important for determining the perceptual salience of a visual event.
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