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1.
eNeuro ; 8(3)2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33893166

ABSTRACT

Environmental enrichment (EE) is beneficial to sensory functions. Thus, elucidating the neural mechanism underlying improvement of sensory stimulus discrimination is important for developing therapeutic strategies. We aim to advance the understanding of such neural mechanism. We found that tactile enrichment improved tactile stimulus feature discrimination. The neural correlate of such improvement was revealed by analyzing single-cell information coding in both the primary somatosensory cortex and the premotor cortex of awake behaving animals. Our results show that EE enhances the decision-information coding capacity of cells that are tuned to adjacent whiskers, and of premotor cortical cells.


Subject(s)
Motor Cortex , Animals , Somatosensory Cortex , Touch , Vibrissae , Wakefulness
2.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 15(5): e1006716, 2019 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31150385

ABSTRACT

Cortical responses to sensory inputs vary across repeated presentations of identical stimuli, but how this trial-to-trial variability impacts detection of sensory inputs is not fully understood. Using multi-channel local field potential (LFP) recordings in primary somatosensory cortex (S1) of the awake mouse, we optimized a data-driven cortical state classifier to predict single-trial sensory-evoked responses, based on features of the spontaneous, ongoing LFP recorded across cortical layers. Our findings show that, by utilizing an ongoing prediction of the sensory response generated by this state classifier, an ideal observer improves overall detection accuracy and generates robust detection of sensory inputs across various states of ongoing cortical activity in the awake brain, which could have implications for variability in the performance of detection tasks across brain states.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/methods , Somatosensory Cortex/physiology , Wakefulness/physiology , Animals , Brain/physiology , Data Accuracy , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Neurons/physiology , Reproducibility of Results
3.
J Neurophysiol ; 113(10): 3850-65, 2015 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25787959

ABSTRACT

One embodiment of context-dependent sensory processing is bottom-up adaptation, where persistent stimuli decrease neuronal firing rate over hundreds of milliseconds. Adaptation is not, however, simply the fatigue of the sensory pathway, but shapes the information flow and selectivity to stimulus features. Adaptation enhances spatial discriminability (distinguishing stimulus location) while degrading detectability (reporting presence of the stimulus), for both the ideal observer of the cortex and awake, behaving animals. However, how the dynamics of the adaptation shape the cortical response and this detection and discrimination tradeoff is unknown, as is to what degree this phenomenon occurs on a continuum as opposed to a switching of processing modes. Using voltage-sensitive dye imaging in anesthetized rats to capture the temporal and spatial characteristics of the cortical response to tactile inputs, we showed that the suppression of the cortical response, in both magnitude and spatial spread, is continuously modulated by the increasing amount of energy in the adapting stimulus, which is nonuniquely determined by its frequency and velocity. Single-trial ideal observer analysis demonstrated a tradeoff between detectability and spatial discriminability up to a moderate amount of adaptation, which corresponds to the frequency range in natural whisking. This was accompanied by a decrease in both detectability and discriminability with high-energy adaptation, which indicates a more complex coupling between detection and discrimination than a simple switching of modes. Taken together, the results suggest that adaptation operates on a continuum and modulates the tradeoff between detectability and discriminability that has implications for information processing in ethological contexts.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/physiology , Afferent Pathways/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Somatosensory Cortex/cytology , Vibrissae/innervation , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Brain Mapping , Optical Imaging , Physical Stimulation , Rats , Signal Detection, Psychological , Voltage-Sensitive Dye Imaging
4.
Neuron ; 81(5): 1152-1164, 2014 Mar 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24607233

ABSTRACT

It has long been posited that detectability of sensory inputs can be sacrificed in favor of improved discriminability and that sensory adaptation may mediate this trade-off. The extent to which this trade-off exists behaviorally and the complete picture of the underlying neural representations that likely subserve the phenomenon remain unclear. In the rodent vibrissa system, an ideal observer analysis of cortical activity measured using voltage-sensitive dye imaging in anesthetized animals was combined with behavioral detection and discrimination tasks, thalamic recordings from awake animals, and computational modeling to show that spatial discrimination performance was improved following adaptation, but at the expense of the ability to detect weak stimuli. Together, these results provide direct behavioral evidence for the trade-off between detectability and discriminability, that this trade-off can be modulated through bottom-up sensory adaptation, and that these effects correspond to important changes in thalamocortical coding properties.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/physiology , Cerebral Cortex/physiology , Discrimination, Psychological/physiology , Thalamus/physiology , Touch Perception/physiology , Vibrissae/physiology , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Cerebral Cortex/cytology , Electric Stimulation , Female , Psychometrics , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Reaction Time/physiology , Thalamus/cytology
5.
J Neural Eng ; 9(2): 026008, 2012 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22327024

ABSTRACT

Voltage-sensitive dye imaging was used to quantify in vivo, network level spatiotemporal cortical activation in response to electrical microstimulation of the thalamus in the rat vibrissa pathway. Thalamic microstimulation evoked a distinctly different cortical response than natural sensory stimulation, with response to microstimulation spreading over a larger area of cortex and being topographically misaligned with the cortical column to which the stimulated thalamic region projects. Electrical stimulation with cathode-leading asymmetric waveforms reduced this topographic misalignment while simultaneously increasing the spatial specificity of the cortical activation. Systematically increasing the asymmetry of the microstimulation pulses revealed a continuum between symmetric and asymmetric stimulation that gradually reduced the topographic bias. These data strongly support the hypothesis that manipulation of the electrical stimulation waveform can be used to selectively activate specific neural elements. Specifically, our results are consistent with the prediction that cathode-leading asymmetric waveforms preferentially stimulate cell bodies over axons, while symmetric waveforms preferentially activate axons over cell bodies. The findings here provide some initial steps toward the design and optimization of microstimulation of neural circuitry, and open the door to more sophisticated engineering tools, such as nonlinear system identification techniques, to develop technologies for more effective control of activity in the nervous system.


Subject(s)
Cerebral Cortex/physiology , Electric Stimulation/methods , Thalamus/physiology , Voltage-Sensitive Dye Imaging/methods , Algorithms , Animals , Axons/physiology , Electrodes , Electrophysiology/methods , Female , Microelectrodes , Neural Pathways/physiology , Normal Distribution , Physical Stimulation , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Somatosensory Cortex/physiology , Vibrissae/innervation , Vibrissae/physiology
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