4.7 Article

Gating of Sensory Input by Spontaneous Cortical Activity

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
卷 33, 期 4, 页码 1684-1695

出版社

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2928-12.2013

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资金

  1. NIH [MH073245, DC009947]
  2. National Science Foundation [SBE-0542013]
  3. Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research
  4. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  5. Hungarian Scientific Research Fund [OTKA NF 101773]
  6. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/I005102/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  7. EPSRC [EP/I005102/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The activity of neural populations is determined not only by sensory inputs but also by internally generated patterns. During quiet wakefulness, the brain produces spontaneous firing events that can spread over large areas of cortex and have been suggested to underlie processes such as memory recall and consolidation. Here we demonstrate a different role for spontaneous activity in sensory cortex: gating of sensory inputs. We show that population activity in rat auditory cortex is composed of transient 50-100 ms packets of spiking activity that occur irregularly during silence and sustained tone stimuli, but reliably at tone onset. Population activity within these packets had broadly consistent spatiotemporal structure, but the rate and also precise relative timing of action potentials varied between stimuli. Packet frequency varied with cortical state, with desynchronized state activity consistent with superposition of multiple overlapping packets. We suggest that such packets reflect the sporadic opening of a gate that allows auditory cortex to broadcast a representation of external sounds to other brain regions.

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