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Embedding of cortical representations by the superficial patch system

Muir, Dylan Richard and Da Costa, Nuno M. A. and Girardin, Cyrille C. and Naaman, Shmuel and Omer, David B. and Ruesch, Elisha and Grinvald, Amiram and Douglas, Rodney J.. (2011) Embedding of cortical representations by the superficial patch system. Cerebral Cortex, 21 (10). pp. 2244-2260.

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Official URL: http://edoc.unibas.ch/50009/

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Abstract

Pyramidal cells in layers 2 and 3 of the neocortex of many species collectively form a clustered system of lateral axonal projections (the superficial patch system--Lund JS, Angelucci A, Bressloff PC. 2003. Anatomical substrates for functional columns in macaque monkey primary visual cortex. Cereb Cortex. 13:15-24. or daisy architecture--Douglas RJ, Martin KAC. 2004. Neuronal circuits of the neocortex. Annu Rev Neurosci. 27:419-451.), but the function performed by this general feature of the cortical architecture remains obscure. By comparing the spatial configuration of labeled patches with the configuration of responses to drifting grating stimuli, we found the spatial organizations both of the patch system and of the cortical response to be highly conserved between cat and monkey primary visual cortex. More importantly, the configuration of the superficial patch system is directly reflected in the arrangement of function across monkey primary visual cortex. Our results indicate a close relationship between the structure of the superficial patch system and cortical responses encoding a single value across the surface of visual cortex (self-consistent states). This relationship is consistent with the spontaneous emergence of orientation response-like activity patterns during ongoing cortical activity (Kenet T, Bibitchkov D, Tsodyks M, Grinvald A, Arieli A. 2003. Spontaneously emerging cortical representations of visual attributes. Nature. 425:954-956.). We conclude that the superficial patch system is the physical encoding of self-consistent cortical states, and that a set of concurrently labeled patches participate in a network of mutually consistent representations of cortical input.
Faculties and Departments:05 Faculty of Science > Departement Biozentrum > Former Organization Units Biozentrum > Neural Networks (Mrsic-Flogel)
UniBasel Contributors:Muir, Dylan R
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Research Article
Publisher:Oxford University Press
ISSN:1047-3211
e-ISSN:1460-2199
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal article
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Last Modified:30 Nov 2017 09:47
Deposited On:30 Nov 2017 09:47

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