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J Neurophysiol (August 17, 2005). doi:10.1152/jn.01309.2004
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Submitted on December 20, 2004
Accepted on August 14, 2005

Background Changes Delay Information Represented in Macaque V1 Neurons

Xin Huang1 and Michael A. Paradiso2*

1 Department of Neuroscience, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA; Vision Center Laboratory, Salk Institute for Biological Studies, La Jolla, CA, USA
2 Department of Neuroscience, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: Michael_Paradiso{at}Brown.edu.

In natural behavioral situations, saccadic eye movements not only introduce new stimuli into V1 receptive fields, they also cause changes in the background. We recorded in awake macaque V1 using a fixation paradigm and compared evoked activity to small stimuli when the background was either static or changing, as with a saccade. When a stimulus was shown on a static background, as in most previous experiments, the initial response was orientation selective and contrast was inversely correlated with response latency. When a stimulus was introduced with a background change, V1 neurons showed a qualitatively different temporal response pattern in which information about stimulus orientation and contrast was delayed. The delay in the representation of visual information was found with three different types of background change - luminance increment, luminance decrement and a pattern change with fixed mean luminance. We also found that with a background change, V1 off responses were suppressed and had a shorter timecourse compared to the static background situation. Our results suggest that the distribution of temporal changes across the visual field plays a fundamental role in determining V1 responses. In the static background condition, temporal change in the visual input occurs only in a small portion of the visual field. In the changing background condition, and presumably in natural vision, temporal changes are widely distributed. Thus a delayed representation of visual information may be more representative of natural visual situations.




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