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1.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 46(7): 589-600, ago. 2013. graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-682401

ABSTRACT

We investigated the GABA-induced inactivation of V2 neurons and terminals on the receptive field properties of this area in an anesthetized and paralyzed Cebus apella monkey. Extracellular single-unit activity was recorded using tungsten microelectrodes in a monkey before and after pressure-injection of a 0.25 or 0.5 M GABA solution. The visual stimulus consisted of a bar moving in 8 possible directions. In total, 24 V2 neurons were studied before and after blocker injections in 4 experimental sessions following GABA injection into area V2. A group of 10 neurons were studied over a short period. An additional 6 neurons were investigated over a long period after the GABA injection. A third group of 8 neurons were studied over a very long period. Overall, these 24 neurons displayed an early (1-20 min) significant general decrease in excitability with concomitant changes in orientation or direction selectivity. GABA inactivation in area V2 produced robust inhibition in 80% and a significant change in directional selectivity in 60% of the neurons examined. These GABA projections are capable of modulating not only levels of spontaneous and driven activity of V2 neurons but also receptive field properties such as direction selectivity.


Subject(s)
Animals , Male , GABA Agents/pharmacology , Neural Inhibition , Neurons/drug effects , Orientation/drug effects , Visual Cortex/drug effects , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/pharmacology , Cebus , Electrocardiography , Lidocaine/metabolism , Microelectrodes , Neural Inhibition/drug effects , Photic Stimulation , Time Factors , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/physiology
2.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 38(1): 59-63, Jan. 2005. graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-405552

ABSTRACT

A Cebus apella monkey weighing 4 kg was trained in a saccadic eye movement task and while the animal performed the task we recorded the extracellular activity of perirhinal cortical neurons. Although the task was very simple and maintained at a constant level of difficulty, we observed considerable changes in the performance of the monkey within each experimental session. The behavioral states responsible for such variation may be related to arousal, motivation or attention of the animal while engaged in the task. In approximately 20 percent (16/82) of the units recorded, long-term direct or inverse correlations could be demonstrated between the monkey's behavioral state and the cells' ongoing activity (independent of the visual stimulation or of the specific behavior along a trial). The perirhinal cortex and other medial temporal structures have long been associated with normal memory function. The data presented here were interpreted in terms of recent reports focusing on the subcortical afferents to temporal lobe structures and their possible role in controlling arousal, motivation, or attention.


Subject(s)
Animals , Cebus/physiology , Motivation , Memory/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Saccades/physiology , Temporal Lobe/physiology , Conditioning, Operant , Photic Stimulation , Reaction Time , Temporal Lobe/cytology
3.
Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 34(12): 1497-1508, Dec. 2001.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-301412

ABSTRACT

This article is an edited transcription of a virtual symposium promoted by the Brazilian Society of Neuroscience and Behavior (SBNeC). Although the dynamics of sensory and motor representations have been one of the most studied features of the central nervous system, the actual mechanisms of brain plasticity that underlie the dynamic nature of sensory and motor maps are not entirely unraveled. Our discussion began with the notion that the processing of sensory information depends on many different cortical areas. Some of them are arranged topographically and others have non-topographic (analytical) properties. Besides a sensory component, every cortical area has an efferent output that can be mapped and can influence motor behavior. Although new behaviors might be related to modifications of the sensory or motor representations in a given cortical area, they can also be the result of the acquired ability to make new associations between specific sensory cues and certain movements, a type of learning known as conditioning motor learning. Many types of learning are directly related to the emotional or cognitive context in which a new behavior is acquired. This has been demonstrated by paradigms in which the receptive field properties of cortical neurons are modified when an animal is engaged in a given discrimination task or when a triggering feature is paired with an aversive stimulus. The role of the cholinergic input from the nucleus basalis to the neocortex was also highlighted as one important component of the circuits responsible for the context-dependent changes that can be induced in cortical maps


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , Brain Mapping , Cerebral Cortex , Neuronal Plasticity , Cerebral Cortex , Emotions , Learning , Motor Cortex , Neurons , Somatosensory Cortex , Visual Perception
4.
An. acad. bras. ciênc ; 71(4,pt.2): 997-1015, dez. 1999. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-249324

ABSTRACT

We propose a framework for understanding visual perception based on a topographically organized, functionally distributed network. In this proposal the extraction of shape boundaries starts at retinal ganglion cells with concentric receptive fields. This information, relayed through the lateral geniculate necleus, creates a neural representation of negative and positive boundaries in a set of topographically connected and organized visual areas. After boundary extraction, several processes involving contrast, brightness, texture and motion extraction take place in subsequent visual areas in different cortical modules. Following these steps of processing, filling-in processes at different levels, within each area, and in separate channels, propagate locally to transform boundary representations onto surfaces representations. These partial representations of the image propagate back and forth in the network, yielding a neural representation of the original image. We propose that completion takes places in a wide cortical circuit that heavily relies on V1, where long-range information helps determine contour responses at specific topographically organized locations. Neural representations of illusory contours would emerge in circuits involving primarily area V2. The neural representation of filling-in of a peripheral stimulus in a dynamic surround (such as in texture filling-in) would depend on circuits involving primarily cells in areas V2 and V3, and would include competitive mechanisms required for figure to ground segregation. Finally, we suggest that multiple representations of the stimulus engage competitive mechanisms that select the "most likely hypothesis". Such choice behavior would rely on winner-take-all mechanisms capable of constructing a single neural representation of perceived objects.


Subject(s)
Humans , Visual Perception/physiology , Form Perception , Neurons , Portrait , Retinal Ganglion Cells
5.
Rev. bras. biol ; 56(supl.1,pt.2): 257-9, dez. 1996. ilus, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-196347

ABSTRACT

Previous studies have reported that superficial layer cells in the superior colliculus (SC) give an enhanced response to a stimulus when it is the target for an eye movement. However, in a peripheral detection paradigm, no such enhancement was found when a stimulus was attended, in the absence of an eye movement. Inasmuch as behavioral studies have found attention deficits in the absence of eye movements following SC lesions or deactivation, we investigated this issue in a paradigm that is very sensitive to effects of attention. In a matching-to-sample paradigm, a sample stimulus was presented at one location followed by a brief test stimulus at that (relevant) location and a distracter at another (irrelevant) location. While maintaining fixation, the monkey indicated whether the sample and the test stimulus matched, ignoring the distracter. The relevant and irrelevant locations were switched from trial to trial. SC cells in the superficial layers tended to give enhanced responses when the attended test stimulus was inside the receptive field compared to when the (pysically identical) distracter was inside the field. We found that responses to attended targets in the receptive field were larger than to physically identical, but ignored, distracter stimuli. These effects were found only in an "automatic" attentional cueing paradigm, in which a peripheral stimulus explicity cued the animal as to the relevant location in the receptive field. No attentional effects were found in a "central"or "cognitive"cueing paradigm, in which the monkey had to learn the relevant location in a given block of trials. The larger responses to attended targets in the automatic cueing paradigm appeared to be due to a sustained elevation of cells'baseline activity when attention was directed to the receptive field, as well as a transient enhancement of the target response. Thus, responses of SC cells appear to be modulated by directed attention, even in absence of eye movements, probably reflecting the properties of cortical cells projecting to the SC.


Subject(s)
Animals , Attention/physiology , Macaca mulatta/physiology , Spatial Behavior/physiology , Superior Colliculi/physiology , Discrimination, Psychological
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