4.6 Article

Converging Neuronal Activity in Inferior Temporal Cortex during the Classification of Morphed Stimuli

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 19, Issue 4, Pages 760-776

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhn125

Keywords

attractor neural network; firing rate adaptation; inferior temporal cortex; monkey behavior; vision; visual classification

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Funding

  1. McKnight Foundation
  2. NIH-NCRR
  3. Human Frontier Science Foundation [RGP0047/2004-C]

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How does the brain dynamically convert incoming sensory data into a representation useful for classification? Neurons in inferior temporal (IT) cortex are selective for complex visual stimuli, but their response dynamics during perceptual classification is not well understood. We studied IT dynamics in monkeys performing a classification task. The monkeys were shown visual stimuli that were morphed (interpolated) between pairs of familiar images. Their ability to classify the morphed images depended systematically on the degree of morph. IT neurons were selected that responded more strongly to one of the 2 familiar images (the effective image). The responses tended to peak similar to 120 ms following stimulus onset with an amplitude that depended almost linearly on the degree of morph. The responses then declined, but remained above baseline for several hundred ms. This sustained component remained linearly dependent on morph level for stimuli more similar to the ineffective image but progressively converged to a single response profile, independent of morph level, for stimuli more similar to the effective image. Thus, these neurons represented the dynamic conversion of graded sensory information into a task-relevant classification. Computational models suggest that these dynamics could be produced by attractor states and firing rate adaptation within the population of IT neurons.

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