4.7 Article

Rapid Adaptation Induces Persistent Biases in Population Codes for Visual Motion

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 36, Issue 16, Pages 4579-4590

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4563-15.2016

Keywords

adaptation; area MT; direction aftereffect; marmoset; middle temporal area; motion

Categories

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council [APP1008287, APP1066588]
  2. Human Frontier Science Program Career Development Award
  3. ARC SRI in Bionic Vision
  4. ARC Centre of Excellence for Integrative Brain Function

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Each visual experience changes the neural response to subsequent stimuli. If the brain is unable to incorporate these encoding changes, the decoding, or perception, of subsequent stimuli is biased. Although the phenomenon of adaptation pervades the nervous system, its effects have been studied mainly in isolation, based on neuronal encoding changes induced by an isolated, prolonged stimulus. To understand how adaptation-induced biases arise and persist under continuous, naturalistic stimulation, we simultaneously recorded the responses of up to 61 neurons in the marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) middle temporal area to a sequence of directions that changed every 500 ms. We found that direction-specific adaptation following only 0.5 s of stimulation strongly affected encoding for up to 2 s by reducing both the gain and the spike count correlations between pairs of neurons with preferred directions close to the adapting direction. In addition, smaller changes in bandwidth and preferred direction were observed in some animals. Decoding individual trials of adaptation-affected activity in simultaneously recorded neurons predicted repulsive biases that are consistent with the direction aftereffect. Surprisingly, removing spike count correlations by trial shuffling did not impact decoding performance or bias. When adaptation had the largest effect on encoding, the decoder made the most errors. This suggests that neural and perceptual repulsion is not a mechanism to enhance perceptual performance but is instead a necessary consequence of optimizing neural encoding for the identification of a wide range of stimulus properties in diverse temporal contexts.

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