Cortical Synchrony as a Mechanism of Collinear Facilitation and Suppression in Early Visual Cortex

DOI

Stimulus-induced oscillations and synchrony among neuronal populations in visual cortex are well-established phenomena. Their functional role in cognition are, however, not well-understood. Recent studies have suggested that neural synchrony may underlie perceptual grouping as stimulus-frequency relationships and stimulus-dependent lateral connectivity profiles can determine the success or failure of synchronization among neuronal groups encoding different stimulus elements. We suggest that the same mechanism accounts for collinear facilitation and suppression effects where the detectability of a target Gabor stimulus is improved or diminished by the presence of collinear flanking Gabor stimuli. We propose a model of oscillators which represent three neuronal populations in visual cortex with distinct receptive fields reflecting the target and two flankers, respectively, and whose connectivity is determined by the collinearity of the presented Gabor stimuli. Our model simulations confirm that neuronal synchrony can indeed explain known collinear facilitation and suppression effects for attended and unattended stimuli.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.34894/ZZOTIF
Related Identifier https://doi.org/10.3389/fnsys.2021.670702
Metadata Access https://dataverse.nl/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_datacite&identifier=doi:10.34894/ZZOTIF
Provenance
Creator Evers, Kris ORCID logo; Peters, Judith ORCID logo; Senden, Mario ORCID logo
Publisher DataverseNL
Contributor Evers, Kris; faculty data manager FPN
Publication Year 2021
Rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
OpenAccess false
Contact Evers, Kris (Maastricht University); faculty data manager FPN (Maastricht University)
Representation
Resource Type program source code; Dataset
Format text/x-python; text/markdown
Size 4428; 1843; 1724; 3162
Version 1.0
Discipline Life Sciences; Medicine