|
|
||||||||
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom
Submitted 27 May 2004; accepted in final form 16 October 2004
The firing of inferior temporal cortex neurons is tuned to objects and faces, and in a complex scene, their receptive fields are reduced to become similar to the size of an object being fixated. These two properties may underlie how objects in scenes are encoded. An alternative hypothesis suggests that visual perception requires the binding of features of the visual target through spike synchrony in a neuronal assembly. To examine possible contributions of firing synchrony of inferior temporal neurons, we made simultaneous recordings of the activity of several neurons while macaques performed a visual discrimination task. The stimuli were presented in either plain or complex backgrounds. The encoding of information of neurons was analyzed using a decoding algorithm. Ninety-four percent to 99% of the total information was available in the firing rate spike counts, and the contribution of spike timing calculated as stimulus-dependent synchronization (SDS) added only 16% of information to the total that was independent of the spike counts in the complex background. Similar results were obtained in the plain background. The quantitatively small contribution of spike timing to the overall information available in spike patterns suggests that information encoding about which stimulus was shown by inferior temporal neurons is achieved mainly by rate coding. Furthermore, it was shown that there was little redundancy (6%) between the information provided by the spike counts of the simultaneously recorded neurons, making spike counts an efficient population code with a high encoding capacity.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
K. Thurley, W. Senn, and H.-R. Luscher Dopamine Increases the Gain of the Input-Output Response of Rat Prefrontal Pyramidal Neurons J Neurophysiol, June 1, 2008; 99(6): 2985 - 2997. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. W. L. Chee, J. O. S. Goh, V. Venkatraman, J. Chow Tan, A. Gutchess, B. Sutton, A. Hebrank, E. Leshikar, and D. Park Age-related changes in object processing and contextual binding revealed using fMR adaptation. J. Cogn. Neurosci., April 1, 2006; 18(4): 495 - 507. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
C. P. Hung, G. Kreiman, T. Poggio, and J. J. DiCarlo Fast Readout of Object Identity from Macaque Inferior Temporal Cortex Science, November 4, 2005; 310(5749): 863 - 866. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
T. Hirabayashi and Y. Miyashita Dynamically Modulated Spike Correlation in Monkey Inferior Temporal Cortex Depending on the Feature Configuration within a Whole Object J. Neurosci., November 2, 2005; 25(44): 10299 - 10307. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| Visit Other APS Journals Online |