Foci of orientation plasticity in visual cortex
Valentin Dragoi (),
Casto Rivadulla and
Mriganka Sur
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Valentin Dragoi: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Casto Rivadulla: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Mriganka Sur: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Nature, 2001, vol. 411, issue 6833, 80-86
Abstract:
Abstract Cortical areas are generally assumed to be uniform in their capacity for adaptive changes or plasticity1,2,3,4. Here we demonstrate, however, that neurons in the cat striate cortex (V1) show pronounced adaptation-induced short-term plasticity of orientation tuning primarily at specific foci. V1 neurons are clustered according to their orientation preference in iso-orientation domains5 that converge at singularities or pinwheel centres6,7. Although neurons in pinwheel centres have similar orientation tuning and responses to those in iso-orientation domains, we find that they differ markedly in their capacity for adaptive changes. Adaptation with an oriented drifting grating stimulus alters responses of neurons located at and near pinwheel centres to a broad range of orientations, causing repulsive shifts in orientation preference and changes in response magnitude. In contrast, neurons located in iso-orientation domains show minimal changes in their tuning properties after adaptation. The anisotropy of adaptation-induced orientation plasticity is probably mediated by inhomogeneities in local intracortical interactions that are overlaid on the map of orientation preference in V1.
Date: 2001
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:nat:nature:v:411:y:2001:i:6833:d:10.1038_35075070
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DOI: 10.1038/35075070
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