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Multiple objects evoke fluctuating responses in several regions of the visual pathway.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Schmehl, MN; Caruso, VC; Chen, Y; Jun, NY; Willett, SM; Mohl, JT; Ruff, DA; Cohen, M; Ebihara, AF; Freiwald, WA; Tokdar, ST; Groh, JM
Published in: eLife
March 2024

How neural representations preserve information about multiple stimuli is mysterious. Because tuning of individual neurons is coarse (e.g., visual receptive field diameters can exceed perceptual resolution), the populations of neurons potentially responsive to each individual stimulus can overlap, raising the question of how information about each item might be segregated and preserved in the population. We recently reported evidence for a potential solution to this problem: when two stimuli were present, some neurons in the macaque visual cortical areas V1 and V4 exhibited fluctuating firing patterns, as if they responded to only one individual stimulus at a time (Jun et al., 2022). However, whether such an information encoding strategy is ubiquitous in the visual pathway and thus could constitute a general phenomenon remains unknown. Here, we provide new evidence that such fluctuating activity is also evoked by multiple stimuli in visual areas responsible for processing visual motion (middle temporal visual area, MT), and faces (middle fundus and anterolateral face patches in inferotemporal cortex - areas MF and AL), thus extending the scope of circumstances in which fluctuating activity is observed. Furthermore, consistent with our previous results in the early visual area V1, MT exhibits fluctuations between the representations of two stimuli when these form distinguishable objects but not when they fuse into one perceived object, suggesting that fluctuating activity patterns may underlie visual object formation. Taken together, these findings point toward an updated model of how the brain preserves sensory information about multiple stimuli for subsequent processing and behavioral action.

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Published In

eLife

DOI

EISSN

2050-084X

ISSN

2050-084X

Publication Date

March 2024

Volume

13

Start / End Page

e91129

Related Subject Headings

  • Visual Pathways
  • Visual Fields
  • Visual Cortex
  • Photic Stimulation
  • Neurons
  • 42 Health sciences
  • 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences
  • 31 Biological sciences
  • 0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Schmehl, M. N., Caruso, V. C., Chen, Y., Jun, N. Y., Willett, S. M., Mohl, J. T., … Groh, J. M. (2024). Multiple objects evoke fluctuating responses in several regions of the visual pathway. ELife, 13, e91129. https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.91129
Schmehl, Meredith N., Valeria C. Caruso, Yunran Chen, Na Young Jun, Shawn M. Willett, Jeff T. Mohl, Douglas A. Ruff, et al. “Multiple objects evoke fluctuating responses in several regions of the visual pathway.ELife 13 (March 2024): e91129. https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.91129.
Schmehl MN, Caruso VC, Chen Y, Jun NY, Willett SM, Mohl JT, et al. Multiple objects evoke fluctuating responses in several regions of the visual pathway. eLife. 2024 Mar;13:e91129.
Schmehl, Meredith N., et al. “Multiple objects evoke fluctuating responses in several regions of the visual pathway.ELife, vol. 13, Mar. 2024, p. e91129. Epmc, doi:10.7554/elife.91129.
Schmehl MN, Caruso VC, Chen Y, Jun NY, Willett SM, Mohl JT, Ruff DA, Cohen M, Ebihara AF, Freiwald WA, Tokdar ST, Groh JM. Multiple objects evoke fluctuating responses in several regions of the visual pathway. eLife. 2024 Mar;13:e91129.

Published In

eLife

DOI

EISSN

2050-084X

ISSN

2050-084X

Publication Date

March 2024

Volume

13

Start / End Page

e91129

Related Subject Headings

  • Visual Pathways
  • Visual Fields
  • Visual Cortex
  • Photic Stimulation
  • Neurons
  • 42 Health sciences
  • 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences
  • 31 Biological sciences
  • 0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology