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1.
Many neurons tend to fire clusters of action potentials called bursts followed by quiescence in response to sensory input. While the mechanisms that underlie burst firing are generally well understood in vitro, the functional role of these bursts in generating behavioral responses to sensory input in vivo are less clear. Pyramidal cells within the electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL) of weakly electric fish offer an attractive model system for studying the coding properties of burst firing, because the anatomy and physiology of the electrosensory circuitry are well understood, and the burst mechanism of ELL pyramidal cells has been thoroughly characterized in vitro. We investigated the coding properties of bursts generated by these cells in vivo in response to mimics of behaviorally relevant sensory input. We found that heterogeneities within the pyramidal cell population had quantitative but not qualitative effects on burst coding for the low frequency components of broadband time varying input. Moreover, spatially localized stimuli mimicking, for example, prey tended to elicit more bursts than spatially global stimuli mimicking conspecific-related stimuli. We also found small but significant correlations between burst attributes such as the number of spikes per burst or the interspike interval during the burst and stimulus attributes such as stimulus amplitude or slope. These correlations were much weaker in magnitude than those observed in vitro. More surprisingly, our results show that correlations between burst and stimulus attributes actually decreased in magnitude when we used low frequency stimuli that are expected to promote burst firing. We propose that this discrepancy is attributable to differences between ELL pyramidal cell burst firing under in vivo and in vitro conditions.  相似文献   

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3.
The functional role of cholinergic input in the modulation of sensory responses was studied using a combination of in vivo and in vitro electrophysiology supplemented by mathematical modeling. The electrosensory system of weakly electric fish recognizes different environmental stimuli by their unique alteration of a self-generated electric field. Variations in the patterns of stimuli are primarily distinguished based on their frequency. Pyramidal neurons in the electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL) are often tuned to respond to specific input frequencies. Alterations in the tuning of the pyramidal neurons may allow weakly electric fish to preferentially select for certain stimuli. Here we show that muscarinic receptor activation in vivo enhances the excitability, burst firing, and subsequently the response of pyramidal cells to naturalistic sensory input. Through a combination of in vitro electrophysiology and mathematical modeling, we reveal that this enhanced excitability and bursting likely results from the down-regulation of an A-type potassium current. Further, we provide an explanation of the mechanism by which these currents can mediate frequency tuning.  相似文献   

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5.
Although serotonergic innervation of sensory brain areas is ubiquitous, its effects on sensory information processing remain poorly understood. We investigated these effects in pyramidal neurons within the electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL) of weakly electric fish. Surprisingly, we found that 5-HT is present at different levels across the different ELL maps; the presence of 5-HT fibers was highest in the map that processes intraspecies communication signals. Electrophysiological recordings revealed that 5-HT increased excitability and burst firing through a decreased medium afterhyperpolarization resulting from reduced small-conductance calcium-activated (SK) currents as well as currents mediated by an M-type potassium channel. We next investigated how 5-HT alters responses to sensory input. 5-HT application decreased the rheobase current, increased the gain, and decreased first spike latency. Moreover, it reduced discriminability between different stimuli, as quantified by the mutual information rate. We hypothesized that 5-HT shifts pyramidal neurons into a burst-firing mode where bursts, when considered as events, can detect the presence of particular stimulus features. We verified this hypothesis using signal detection theory. Our results indeed show that serotonin-induced bursts of action potentials, when considered as events, could detect specific stimulus features that were distinct from those detected by isolated spikes. Moreover, we show the novel result that isolated spikes transmit more information after 5-HT application. Our results suggest a novel function for 5-HT in that it enables differential processing by action potential patterns in response to current injection.  相似文献   

6.
Short interspike intervals such as those that occur during burst firing are hypothesized to be distinct features of the neural code. Although a number of correlations between the occurrence of burst events and aspects of the stimulus have been identified, the relationship between burst characteristics and information transfer is uncertain. Pyramidal cells in the electrosensory lobe of the weakly electric fish, Apteronotus leptorhynchus, respond to dynamic broadband electrosensory stimuli with bursts and isolated spikes. In the present study, we mimic synaptic input during sensory stimulation by direct stimulation of electrosensory pyramidal cells with broadband current in vitro. The pyramidal cells respond to this stimulus with burst interspike intervals (ISIs) that are reliably and precisely correlated with the intensity of stimulus upstrokes. We found burst ISIs must differ by a minimum of 2 ms to discriminate, with low error, differences in stimulus intensity. Based on these results, we define and quantify a candidate interval code for the processing of sensory input. Finally, we demonstrate that interval coding is restricted to short ISIs such as those generated in burst events and that the proposed interval code is distinct from rate and timing codes.  相似文献   

7.
The tuning of neuronal responsiveness to specific stimulus frequencies is an important computation across many sensory modalities. The weakly electric fish Apteronotus leptorhynchus detects amplitude modulations of a self-generated quasi-sinusoidal electric organ discharge to sense its environment. These fish have to parse a complicated electrosensory environment with a wide range of possible frequency content. One solution has been to create multiple representations of the sensory input across distinct maps in the electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL) that participate in distinct behavioral functions. E- and I-type pyramidal cells in the ELL that process sensory input further exhibit a preferred range of stimulus frequencies in relation to the different behaviors and sensory maps. We tested the hypothesis that variations in the intrinsic spiking mechanism of E- and I-type pyramidal cells contribute to map-specific frequency tuning. We find that E-cells exhibit a systematic change in their intrinsic spike characteristics and frequency tuning across sensory maps, whereas I-cells are constant in both spike characteristics and frequency tuning. As frequency tuning becomes more high-pass in E-cells, the refractory variables of spike half-width and afterhyperpolarization magnitude increase, spike threshold increases, adaptation becomes faster, and the gain of the spiking response decreases. These findings indicate that frequency tuning across sensory maps in the ELL is supported by differences in the intrinsic spike characteristics of pyramidal cells, revealing a link between cellular biophysical properties and signal processing in sensory maps with defined behavioral roles.  相似文献   

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1. This is the second of a series of papers on the electrosensory lobe and closely associated structures in electric fish of the family Mormyridae. The focus of the study is on the regions of the electrosensory lobe where primary afferent fibers from mormyromast electroreceptors terminate. 2. This second paper examines the responses of single cells in the mormyromast regions of the electrosensory lobe to electrosensory stimuli and to corollary discharge signals associated with the motor command that drives the electric organ to discharge. All recordings were extracellular. 3. Two major types of cells were identified: I cells, which were inhibited by electrosensory stimuli in the center of their receptive fields; and E cells, which were excited by such stimuli. 4. I cells and E cells shared a number of common features. Both types could have small receptive fields limited to only a few electroreceptors (3-5), and both types were markedly affected by the corollary discharge of the electric organ discharge (EOD) motor command. Cells of both types also showed clear plasticity in their responses to the corollary discharge or to the corollary discharge plus a stimulus. 5. I cells could be subdivided into three subtypes, I1, I2, and I3, on the basis of corollary discharge responses in the absence of sensory stimuli. I1 and I2 cells showed consistent corollary discharge bursts with little or no additional activity beyond the duration of the burst. The corollary discharge bursts of I1 cells were more stereotyped and of shorter latency than those of I2 cells. I3 cells had more spontaneous activity than I1 or I2 cells and minimal cells had more spontaneous activity than I1 or I2 cells and minimal corollary discharge responses in the absence of sensory stimuli. Field potentials indicated that all three subtypes of I cells were recorded in or near the ganglion layer of the electrosensory lobe. 6. Corollary discharge responses were plastic and depended on recent pairing of a sensory stimulus with the EOD motor command. Such plasticity was clearer in I2 and I3 cells than in I1 cells. Inhibitory sensory stimuli were paired with the EOD motor command for periods of a few seconds to several minutes. Such pairing resulted in a marked enhancement of the corollary discharge response in I2 cells, as shown by examining the effect of the motor command after turning off the stimulus. In I3 cells, such pairing resulted in a clear corollary burst to the command at the time of the previously paired inhibition.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Sensory stimuli typically activate many receptors at once and therefore should lead to increases in correlated activity among central neurons. Such correlated activity could be a critical feature in the encoding and decoding of information in central circuits. Here we characterize correlated activity in response to two biologically relevant classes of sensory stimuli in the primary electrosensory nuclei, the electrosensory lateral line lobe, of the weakly electric fish Apteronotus leptorhynchus. Our results show that these neurons can display significant correlations in their baseline activities that depend on the amount of receptive field overlap. A detailed analysis of spike trains revealed that correlated activity resulted predominantly from a tendency to fire synchronous or anti-synchronous bursts of spikes. We also explored how different stimulation protocols affected correlated activity: while prey-like stimuli increased correlated activity, conspecific-like stimuli decreased correlated activity. We also computed the correlations between the variabilities of each neuron to repeated presentations of the same stimulus (noise correlations) and found lower amounts of noise correlation for communication stimuli. Therefore the decrease in correlated activity seen with communication stimuli is caused at least in part by reduced noise correlations. This differential modulation in correlated activity occurred because of changes in burst firing at the individual neuron level. Our results show that different categories of behaviorally relevant input will differentially affect correlated activity. In particular, we show that the number of correlated bursts within a given time window could be used by postsynaptic neurons to distinguish between both stimulus categories.  相似文献   

11.
Mathematical analyses and computer simulations are used to study the adaptation induced by plasticity at inhibitory synapses in a cerebellum-like structure, the electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL) of mormyrid electric fish. Single-cell model results are compared with results obtained at the system level in vivo. The model of system level adaptation uses detailed temporal learning rules of plasticity at excitatory and inhibitory synapses onto Purkinje-like neurons. Synaptic plasticity in this system depends on the time difference between pre- and postsynaptic spikes. Adaptation is measured by the ability of the system to cancel a reafferent electrosensory signal by generating a negative image of the predicted signal. The effects of plasticity are tested for the relative temporal correlation between the inhibitory input and the sensory input, the gain of the sensory signal, and the presence of shunting inhibition. The model suggests that the presence of plasticity at inhibitory synapses improves the function of the system if the inhibitory inputs are temporally correlated with a predictable electrosensory signal. The functional improvements include an increased range of adaptability and a higher rate of system level adaptation. However, the presence of shunting inhibition has little effect on the dynamics of the model. The model quantifies the rate of system level adaptation and the accuracy of the negative image. We find that adaptation proceeds at a rate comparable to results obtained from experiments in vivo if the inhibitory input is correlated with electrosensory input. The mathematical analysis and computer simulations support the hypothesis that inhibitory synapses in the molecular layer of the ELL change their efficacy in response to the timing of pre- and postsynaptic spikes. Predictions include the rate of adaptation to sensory stimuli, the range of stimulus amplitudes for which adaptation is possible, the stability of stored negative images, and the timing relations of a temporal learning rule governing the inhibitory synapses. These results may be generalized to other adaptive systems in which plasticity at inhibitory synapses obeys similar learning rules.  相似文献   

12.
Sensory neural systems use spatiotemporal coding mechanisms to represent stimuli. These time-varying response patterns sometimes outlast the stimulus. Can the temporal structure of a stimulus interfere with, or even disrupt, the spatiotemporal structure of the neural representation? We investigated this potential confound in the locust olfactory system. When odors were presented in trains of nearly overlapping pulses, responses of first-order interneurons (projection neurons) changed reliably, and often markedly, with pulse position as responses to one pulse interfered with subsequent responses. However, using the responses of an ensemble of projection neurons, we could accurately classify the odorants as well as characterize the temporal properties of the stimulus. Further, we found that second-order follower neurons showed firing patterns consistent with the information in the projection-neuron ensemble. Thus, ensemble-based spatiotemporal coding could disambiguate complex and potentially confounding temporally structured sensory stimuli and thereby provide an invariant response to a stimulus presented in various ways.  相似文献   

13.
This is the second in a series of two papers on the mormyromast regions of the electrosensory lobe (ELL) of mormyrid electric fish. In this study, we examined the effects of artificial stimulation of two of the three major central inputs to ELL on different morphologically identified cell types of ELL. The three major central inputs to ELL are the eminentia granularis posterior, the juxtalobar nucleus, and the preeminential nucleus. We stimulated the juxtalobar and preeminential nuclei. We compared the effects of such stimulation with effects of the electric organ corollary discharge (EOCD) on the same cells to understand the origins of EOCD effects in ELL. Responses to juxtalobar stimulation were different in different cell types and remarkably similar to corollary discharge responses in the same cells. In addition, responses to juxtalobar stimulation were consistently depressed when the stimulus was delivered immediately after the naturally occurring EOCD response. These findings indicate that the juxtalobar nucleus is a major source of the EOCD responses of ELL cells. In contrast, preeminential stimulation evoked similar responses in medium ganglionic cells, and the two types of efferent cells that were quite different from the EOCD responses of these cells, suggesting that the preeminential nucleus is less important than the juxtalobar nucleus in determining the EOCD responses of ELL cells. Preeminential responses of medium ganglionic and efferent cells consisted of a short-latency excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) followed by a long-lasting inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP). Both the EPSPs and IPSPs were facilitated when brief bursts of closely spaced stimuli were delivered.  相似文献   

14.
The orbitofrontal cortex: Neuronal activity in the behaving monkey   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
Summary Single unit recording of neurons in the orbitofrontal cortex of the alert rhesus monkey was used to investigate responses to sensory stimulation. 32.4% of the neurons had visual responses that had typical latencies of 100–200 ms, and 9.4% responded to gustatory inputs. Most neurons were selective, in that they responded consistently to some stimuli such as foods or aversive objects, but not to others. In a number of cases the neurons responded selectively to particular foods or aversive stimuli. However, this high selectivity could not be explained by simple sensory features of the stimulus, since the responses of some neurons could be readily reversed if the meaning of the stimulus (i.e. whether it was food or aversive) was changed, even though its physical appearance remained identical. Further, some bimodal neurons received convergent visual and gustatory inputs, with matching selectivity for the same stimulus in both modalities, again suggesting that an explanation in terms of simple sensory features is inadequate.Neurons were also studied during the performance of tasks known to be disrupted by orbitofrontal lesions, including a go/no go visual discrimination task and its reversal. 8.6% of neurons had differential responses to the two discriminative stimuli in the task, one of which indicated that reward was available and the other saline. Reversing the meaning of the two stimuli showed that whereas some differential units were closely linked to the sensory features of the stimuli, and some to their behavioural significance, others were conditional, in that they would only respond if a particular stimulus was present, and if it was the one being currently rewarded. Other neurons had activity related to the outcome of the animal's response, with some indicating that reinforcement had been received and others, that an error had been made and that a reversal was required.Thus, neurons in the orbitofrontal cortex possess highly coded information about which stimuli are present, as well as information about the consequences of the animal's own responses. It is suggested that together they may constitute a neuronal mechanism for determining whether particular visual stimuli continue to be associated with reinforcement, as well as providing for the modification of the animal's behavioural responses to such stimuli when those responses are no longer appropriate.  相似文献   

15.
Directionally selective neurons strongly fire when presented with a preferred direction of motion of a bar and only weakly respond otherwise. Intuition suggests these "specialist" neurons would be better suited to report this stimulus feature to higher visual centers than "generalist" neurons, neurons that broadly modulate their activity to the feature. However, as stimuli are encoded not by one cell but by large neural ensembles, we have studied the role of single-cell receptive field properties in stimulus representation. Using regression error statistics, we compared the performance of direction-of-motion estimators, using ensembles of neurons selectively responding to direction of motion and estimators using ensembles not specializing to direction. We found that direction-selective ensembles were no better at representing a bar's direction of motion than nonselective ensembles. Quite the opposite, the nonselective unit ensembles provided a better estimate of the direction (standard deviation of the error of 33 degrees) than the direction-selective ensembles (standard deviation of the error of 42 degrees). The nonselective neurons provided information through a latency code that is apparent only when a neuron's activity is considered in the context of the responses of neighboring neurons. These results suggest that models utilizing both generalist and specialist neurons may better reflect the encoding mechanisms that take place in sensory pathways.  相似文献   

16.
Neurons in sensory systems respond to stimuli within their receptive fields, but the magnitude of the response depends on specific stimulus features. In the rodent whisker system, the response magnitude to the deflection of a particular whisker is, in most cells, dependent on the direction of deflection. Here we use in vivo intracellular recordings from thalamorecipient neurons in layers 3 and 4 of the rat barrel cortex to elucidate the dynamics of the synaptic inputs underlying direction selectivity. We show that cells are direction selective despite a broadly tuned excitatory and inhibitory synaptic input. Selectivity emerges from a direction-dependent temporal shift of excitation relative to inhibition. For preferred direction deflections, excitation precedes inhibition, but as the direction diverges from the preferred, this separation decreases. Our results illustrate a mechanism by which the timing of the synaptic inputs, and not their relative peak amplitudes, primarily determine feature selectivity.  相似文献   

17.
1. Mormyromast electroreceptor organs in electric fish of the family Mormyridae have two types of separately innervated sensory cells, the A and B sensory cells of Szabo and Wersall. The first paper in this series showed anatomically that afferent fibers from the two types of sensory cell terminate centrally in separate zones of the electrosensory lateral line lobe (ELL), fibers from A cells terminating in the medial zone and fibers from B cells terminating in the dorsolateral zone. The goal of the present study was to determine the physiological differences between the two morphologically distinct types of mormyromast afferent fibers. 2. The present study has two parts. In the first part, mormyromast fibers were recorded near their central terminals in the two mormyromast zones of ELL. In the second part, mormyromast fibers were recorded from a peripheral electrosensory nerve. In both parts, various electrosensory stimuli were delivered and voltage thresholds were measured at the electroreceptor. 3. In the first part of the study, mormyromast fibers terminating in the two central zones were found to be different in their thresholds and in the maximum number of spikes evoked by a single stimulus. Afferent fibers terminating in the medial zone, which arise from A sensory cells, had higher thresholds and smaller maximum spike numbers than fibers terminating in the dorsolateral zone, which arise from B sensory cells. 4. In the second part of the study, the same two groups of fibers--one group with a high threshold and a small maximum spike number, and a second group with a low threshold and a large maximum spike number--were identified in extracellular recordings from a peripheral electrosensory nerve. The thresholds of the two groups were quite distinct, allowing the fibers to be divided into high- and low-threshold groups, which most likely represent the fibers from the A and B sensory cells, respectively. 5. The high- and low-threshold groups of fibers recorded from peripheral nerve were found to be different in a number of additional properties besides threshold and maximum spike number. Additional differences were found in the following properties: strength-duration curve, correlation with a receptor potential recorded at the electroreceptor, tuning curve, and short latency facilitation by a conditioning stimulus. Thus there appear to be several physiological differences between mormyromast afferent fibers from A and B sensory cells, in addition to the differences in threshold and spike number.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Neurons in high-level sensory cortical areas respond to complex features in sensory stimuli. Feature elimination is a useful technique for studying these responses. In this approach, a complex stimulus, which evokes a neuronal response, is simplified, and if the cell responds to the reduced stimulus, it is considered selective for the remaining features. We have developed a feature-elimination technique that uses either the principal or the independent components of a stimulus to define a subset of features, to which a neuron might be sensitive. The original stimulus can be filtered using these components, resulting in a stimulus that retains only a fraction of the features present in the original. We demonstrate the use of this technique on macaque vocalizations, an important class of stimuli being used to study auditory function in awake, behaving primate experiments. We show that principal-component analysis extracts features that are closely related to the dominant Fourier components of the stimuli, often called formants in the study of speech perception. Conversely, independent-component analysis extracts features that preserve the relative phase across a set of harmonically related frequencies. We have used several statistical techniques to explore the original and filtered stimuli, as well as the components extracted by each technique. This novel approach provides a powerful method for determining the essential features within complex stimuli that activate higher-order sensory neurons.  相似文献   

19.
Central sensory neurons often respond selectively to particular combinations of stimulus attributes, but we know little about the underlying cellular mechanisms. The weakly electric fish Gymnarchus discriminates the sign of the frequency difference (Df) between a neighbor's electric organ discharge (EOD) and its own EOD by comparing temporal patterns of amplitude modulation (AM) and phase modulation (PM). Sign-selective neurons in the midbrain respond preferentially to either positive frequency differences (Df >0 selective) or negative frequency differences (Df <0 selective). To study the mechanisms of combination sensitivity, we made whole cell intracellular recordings from sign-selective midbrain neurons in vivo and recorded postsynaptic potential (PSP) responses to AM, PM, Df >0, and Df <0. Responses to AM and PM consisted of alternating excitatory and inhibitory PSPs. These alternating responses were in phase for the preferred sign of Df and offset for the nonpreferred sign of Df. Therefore a certain degree of sign selectivity was predicted by a linear sum of the responses to AM and PM. Responses to the nonpreferred sign of Df, but not the preferred sign of Df, were substantially weaker than linear predictions, causing a significant increase in the actual degree of sign selectivity. By using various levels of current clamp and comparing our results to simple models of synaptic integration, we demonstrate that this decreased response to the nonpreferred sign of Df is caused by a reduction in voltage-dependent excitatory conductances. This finding reveals that nonlinear decoders, in the form of voltage-dependent conductances, can enhance the selectivity of single neurons for particular combinations of stimulus attributes.  相似文献   

20.
Responses of primary visual cortex (V1) neurons to stimuli inside the classic receptive field (CRF) can be modulated by stimuli outside the CRF. We recently reported that responses of most V1 neurons to a line in the CRF center are inhibited by large surround-stimuli and that this modulation is stimulus selective. Here we report that a significant proportion of V1 neurons in alert monkeys respond directly to stimuli outside the CRF with very long latency and much reduced selectivity. When surround stimuli are presented alone, three response patterns can be distinguished in 153 single- or multiunits tested: (1) 31.4% have no significant response; (2) 50.3% show excitatory responses that are significantly higher than spontaneous activity. The average latency of these responses is about 145 ms, 2–3 times longer than center responses; (3) 18.3% show suppressed spontaneous activity after stimulus onset. The direct surround responses are found to be only weakly selective for the orientation of contextual lines, and not selective for other contextual patterns tested. While the outburst of responses to stimuli within the CRF is not affected by reducing stimulus duration from 500 ms to 50 ms, late excitatory surround responses are virtually eliminated. We propose that the late excitatory surround responses to extra-CRF stimulation alone are the reflection of feedback from higher cortical areas and may contribute to reduced contextual inhibition of cells in V1. This could play a role in figure-ground segregation. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

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