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Neural Mechanisms Subsecond Temporal

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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Neural Mechanisms of Subsecond Temporal Encoding in Primary Visual Cortex

Samuel Post

University of California, Riverside

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Tuesday, November 28, 2023

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Tuesday, November 28, 2023

10:00 AM America/New_York

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Host: Timing Research Forum

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Abstract

Subsecond timing underlies nearly all sensory and motor activities across species and is critical to survival. While subsecond temporal information has been found across cortical and subcortical regions, it is unclear if it is generated locally and intrinsically or if it is a read out of a centralized clock-like mechanism. Indeed, mechanisms of subsecond timing at the circuit level are largely obscure. Primary sensory areas are well-suited to address these question as they have early access to sensory information and provide minimal processing to it: if temporal information is found in these regions, it is likely to be generated intrinsically and locally. We test this hypothesis by training mice to perform an audio-visual temporal pattern sensory discrimination task as we use 2-photon calcium imaging, a technique capable of recording population level activity at single cell resolution, to record activity in primary visual cortex (V1). We have found significant changes in network dynamics through mice’s learning of the task from naive to middle to expert levels. Changes in network dynamics and behavioral performance are well accounted for by an intrinsic model of timing in which the trajectory of q network through high dimensional state space represents temporal sensory information. Conversely, while we found evidence of other temporal encoding models, such as oscillatory activity, we did not find that they accounted for increased performance but were in fact correlated with the intrinsic model itself. These results provide insight into how subsecond temporal information is encoded mechanistically at the circuit level.

Topics

audio-visualintrinsic modelnetwork dynamicsoscillatory activityprimary visual cortexsensory discriminationsubsecond timingtemporal encodingtwo-photon calcium imaging

About the Speaker

Samuel Post

University of California, Riverside

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