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Ambiguous Stimuli

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ambiguous stimuli

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with ambiguous stimuli across World Wide.
4 curated items4 Seminars
Updated over 4 years ago
4 items · ambiguous stimuli
4 results
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

A no-report paradigm reveals that face cells multiplex consciously perceived and suppressed stimuli

Janis Hesse
California Institute of Technology
Feb 25, 2021

Having conscious experience is arguably the most important reason why it matters to us whether we are alive or dead. A powerful paradigm to identify neural correlates of consciousness is binocular rivalry, wherein a constant visual stimulus evokes a varying conscious percept. It has recently been suggested that activity modulations observed during rivalry may represent the act of report rather than the conscious percept itself. Here, we performed single-unit recordings from face patches in macaque inferotemporal (IT) cortex using a novel no-report paradigm in which the animal’s conscious percept was inferred from eye movements. These experiments reveal two new results concerning the neural correlates of consciousness. First, we found that high proportions of IT neurons represented the conscious percept even without active report. Using high-channel recordings, including a new 128-channel Neuropixels-like probe, we were able to decode the conscious percept on single trials. Second, we found that even on single trials, modulation to rivalrous stimuli was weaker than that to unambiguous stimuli, suggesting that cells may encode not only the conscious percept but also the suppressed stimulus. To test this hypothesis, we varied the identity of the suppressed stimulus during binocular rivalry; we found that indeed, we could decode not only the conscious percept but also the suppressed stimulus from neural activity. Moreover, the same cells that were strongly modulated by the conscious percept also tended to be strongly modulated by the suppressed stimulus. Together, our findings indicate that (1) IT cortex possesses a true neural correlate of consciousness even in the absence of report, and (2) this correlate consists of a population code wherein single cells multiplex representation of the conscious percept and veridical physical stimulus, rather than a subset of cells perfectly reflecting consciousness.

SeminarNeuroscience

‘Optimistic’ and ‘pessimistic’ decision-making as an indicator of animal emotion and welfare

Prof Mike Mendl and Dr Vikki Neville
University of Bristol
Dec 7, 2020

Reliable and validated measures of emotion in animals are of great import; they are crucial to better understanding and developing treatments for human mood disorders, and they are necessary for ensuring good animal welfare. We have developed a novel measure of emotion in animals that is grounded in theory and psychological research – decision-making under ambiguity. Specifically, we consider that more ‘optimistic’ decisions about ambiguous stimuli reflect more positive emotional states, while the opposite is true for more ‘pessimistic’ decisions. In this talk, we will outline the background behind and implementation of this measure, meta-analyses that have been conducted to validate the measure, and discuss how computational modelling has been used to further understand the cognitive processes underlying ‘optimistic’ and ‘pessimistic’ decision-making as an indicator of animal emotion and welfare.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Distributed replay in the human brain, and how to find it

Nicolas Schuck
MPI Berlin
Jul 28, 2020

I will present work on a novel fMRI analysis method that allows us to investigate sequential reactivation in the hippocampus. Our method focuses on analysing the time courses of probabilistic multivariate classifiers and allows us to infer the presence and frequency of fast sequential reactivation events. Using a paradigm in which we controlled the speed of sequential visually elicited activations, we validated the method in visual cortex for event sequences with only 32 ms between items. We show that detectability remains possible if low signal-to-noise ratio and when sequence events occur at unknown times. In a preliminary analysis, we show that even the exposure to our visual paradigm elicits reactivations in visual cortex at rest following the task. I then present work in which we tested how representations influence replay by asking whether transitions between task-state representations are reactivated at rest during hippocampal replay events. Participants learned to make decisions about ambiguous stimuli that depended on past events and attentionally filtered stimulus processing. FMRI signals during rest periods following this task indicated sequential reactivation of task states. These results indicate that adaptive task state representations are computed and replayed at different cortical sites. In combination with other methods, fMRI may allow us to unravel this coordinated nature of replay.