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J Neurophysiol (November 1, 2002). 10.1152/jn.00202.2002
Submitted on 18 March 2002
Accepted on 2 August 2002
RAPID COMMUNICATION
1Neuropsychology Laboratory, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, West Haven, Connecticut 06516; 2Department of Neurology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510; 3A. Puce, Brain Sciences Institute, Swinburne University of Technology, Hawthorn, Victoria 3122, Australia; and 4G. McCarthy, Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Brain Imaging and Analysis Center, Duke University Medical Center, Durham North Carolina 27710
Allison, Truett,
Aina Puce, and
Gregory McCarthy.
Category-Sensitive Excitatory and Inhibitory Processes in Human
Extrastriate Cortex. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 2864-2868, 2002. Single-cell recordings from the temporal
lobe of monkeys viewing stimuli show that cells may be highly
selective, responding for example to particular objects such as faces.
However, stimulus-selective cells may be inhibited by nonpreferred
stimuli. Can such inhibitory mechanisms be detected in human visual
cortex? In previous recordings from the surface of human ventral
extrastriate cortex, we found that specific categories of stimuli such
as faces and words generate category-specific negative event-related
potentials (ERPs) with a peak latency of about 200 ms (N200). Laminar
recordings in animal cortex suggest that the human N200 reflects
excitatory depolarizing potentials in apical dendrites of pyramidal
cells. In this study we found that, at about half of word-specific N200
sites, faces generated a positive ERP (P200); conversely, at about half
of face-specific sites, words generated P200s. The electrogenesis of
N200 implies that P200 ERPs reflect hyperpolarizing inhibition of
apical dendrites. These recordings, together with the prior animal
recordings, provide strong circumstantial evidence that in human cortex
populations of cells responsive to one stimulus category (such as
faces) inhibit cells responsive to another category (such as words),
probably by a type of lateral inhibition. Of the stimulus categories
studied quantitatively, face-specific cells are maximally inhibited by
words and vice versa, but other categories of stimuli may generate
smaller P200s, suggesting that inhibition of category-specific cells by
nonpreferred stimuli is a general feature of human extrastriate cortex
involved in object recognition.
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