4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Contextual modulation of orientation tuning contributes to efficient processing of natural stimuli

Journal

NETWORK-COMPUTATION IN NEURAL SYSTEMS
Volume 16, Issue 2-3, Pages 139-149

Publisher

INFORMA HEALTHCARE
DOI: 10.1080/09548980500463347

Keywords

cat; visual cortex; neuronal response properties

Funding

  1. NEI NIH HHS [R01 EY12561] Funding Source: Medline

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It has been proposed that sensory neurons are adapted to the statistical structure of the natural environment in order to encode natural stimuli efficiently. While spatiotemporal correlations in luminance signals may be decorrelated by neurons in early visual processing stages, higher-order correlations, such as those in the orientation domain, are likely to persist in the input representation until the cortical level. In this study, we first examine orientation correlations in natural stimuli across brief time intervals and across nearby regions of space, and find strong correlations in both domains. We then examine contextual modulation of orientation tuning. We find that both temporal and spatial contexts exert a common influence on orientation tuning, shifting tuning away from the orientation of either the adapting (temporal) or surrounding (spatial) grating. Finally, we incorporate this context-mediated repulsive shift in orientation tuning into a model of cortical responses. We find that a direct result of the shift is a reduction of the redundancy in the population responses evoked by the orientation configurations that are most common in natural stimuli. Thus, cortical neurons may be adapted to the statistics of orientation in natural stimuli in order to increase the efficiency of natural stimulus representation.

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