| Literature DB >> 27989463 |
Wujie Zhang1, Annegret L Falkner2, B Suresh Krishna3, Michael E Goldberg4, Kenneth D Miller5.
Abstract
Little is known about the internal circuitry of the primate lateral intraparietal area (LIP). During two versions of a delayed-saccade task, we found radically different network dynamics beneath similar population average firing patterns. When neurons are not influenced by stimuli outside their receptive fields (RFs), dynamics of the high-dimensional LIP network during slowly varying activity lie predominantly in one multi-neuronal dimension, as described previously. However, when activity is suppressed by stimuli outside the RF, slow LIP dynamics markedly deviate from a single dimension. The conflicting results can be reconciled if two LIP local networks, each underlying an RF location and dominated by a single multi-neuronal activity pattern, are suppressively coupled to each other. These results demonstrate the low dimensionality of slow LIP local dynamics, and suggest that LIP local networks encoding the attentional and movement priority of competing visual locations actively suppress one another.Entities:
Keywords: LIP; attention; model; network dynamics; surround suppression
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27989463 PMCID: PMC5217805 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2016.11.023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuron ISSN: 0896-6273 Impact factor: 17.173