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Area V4

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area V4

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with area V4 across World Wide.
4 curated items2 Seminars2 ePosters
Updated over 3 years ago
4 items · area V4
4 results
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Timescales of neural activity: their inference, control, and relevance

Anna Levina
Universität Tübingen
May 3, 2022

Timescales characterize how fast the observables change in time. In neuroscience, they can be estimated from the measured activity and can be used, for example, as a signature of the memory trace in the network. I will first discuss the inference of the timescales from the neuroscience data comprised of the short trials and introduce a new unbiased method. Then, I will apply the method to the data recorded from a local population of cortical neurons from the visual area V4. I will demonstrate that the ongoing spiking activity unfolds across at least two distinct timescales - fast and slow - and the slow timescale increases when monkeys attend to the location of the receptive field. Which models can give rise to such behavior? Random balanced networks are known for their fast timescales; thus, a change in the neurons or network properties is required to mimic the data. I will propose a set of models that can control effective timescales and demonstrate that only the model with strong recurrent interactions fits the neural data. Finally, I will discuss the timescales' relevance for behavior and cortical computations.

SeminarNeuroscience

- CANCELLED -

Selina Solomon
Kohn lab, Albert Einstein College of Medicine; Growth Intelligence, UK
Oct 19, 2021

A recent formulation of predictive coding theory proposes that a subset of neurons in each cortical area encodes sensory prediction errors, the difference between predictions relayed from higher cortex and the sensory input. Here, we test for evidence of prediction error responses in spiking responses and local field potentials (LFP) recorded in primary visual cortex and area V4 of macaque monkeys, and in complementary electroencephalographic (EEG) scalp recordings in human participants. We presented a fixed sequence of visual stimuli on most trials, and violated the expected ordering on a small subset of trials. Under predictive coding theory, pattern-violating stimuli should trigger robust prediction errors, but we found that spiking, LFP and EEG responses to expected and pattern-violating stimuli were nearly identical. Our results challenge the assertion that a fundamental computational motif in sensory cortex is to signal prediction errors, at least those based on predictions derived from temporal patterns of visual stimulation.

ePoster

Neuronal activity in prefrontal cortex and visual area V4 predict response speed and correct behavior in an attentional task through different mechanisms

Emile Caytan, Sofia Paneri, Georgia Gregoriou

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

State-dependent target representation in area V4 of macaque visual cortex

Kumari Liza, Jaime Cadena-Valencia, Ricardo Kienitz, Diego Ghezzi, Michael Schmid

FENS Forum 2024