Event Detail (Archived)

Intrinsic Traveling Waves and Visual Perception

  • This event already took place in April 2023
  • Carson Family Auditorium (CRC)

Event Details

Type
Other Seminars
Speaker(s)
John H. Reynolds, Ph.D., Fiona and Sanjay Jha Chair in Neuroscience, Salk Institute for Biological Studies
Speaker bio(s)

Perceptual sensitivity varies from moment to moment. One potential source of this variability is spontaneous fluctuations in neural sensitivity. Using newly developed techniques to characterize the moment-to-moment dynamics of noisy multi-electrode data, we find that spontaneous cortical activity is organized into traveling waves that traverse visual cortex several times per second. Recording in Area MT of the common marmoset, we find that these intrinsic traveling waves (iTWs) regulate both the gain of the stimulus-evoked spiking response and the monkey’s perceptual sensitivity. In monkeys trained to detect faint visual targets, the iTW state prior to target onset predicts the magnitude of target-evoked neural response and the likelihood that the monkey will detect the target. A large-scale spiking network model with conductance-based synapses recapitulates the properties of iTWs measured in vivo. The model shows that iTWs naturally emerge from the delays that occur as action potentials traverse unmyelinated horizontal fibers. The model predicts that iTWs are sparse, in the sense that only a small fraction of the neural population participates in any individual iTW. As a result, iTWs can occur without inducing correlated variability, which we have found, in separate experiments, can impair sensory discrimination. We thus refer to the model as the sparse-wave model of iTWs. The model also predicts that iTWs fall into feature-selective motifs whose selectivity stems from the horizontal fibers that preferentially connect similarly tuned feature domains. Consistent with this prediction, we find distinct clusters of iTW motifs. Some motifs modulate neural activity and perceptual sensitivity in a feature-selective manner. Taken together, these findings lead to the conclusion that traveling waves strongly modulate neural and perceptual sensitivity, in a feature-selective manner. These findings are consistent with studies of traveling waves in the motor system, suggesting that iTWs may represent a brain-wide computational principle. Related Literature: Davis, W., Muller, L., Martinez-Trujillo, J., Sejnowski, T., Reynolds, J.H. Spontaneous travelling cortical waves gate perception in behaving primates (2020) Nature. DOI: https://www.nature.com/articles/ s41586-020-2802-y. Davis, Z.W., Benigno, G.B., Fletterman, C., Desbordes, T., Steward, C., Sejnowski, T.J., Reynolds, J.H., Muller, L. Spontaneous traveling waves naturally emerge from horizontal fiber time delays and travel through locally asynchronous-irregular states. (2021) Nature Communications. 12(1):6057. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-26175-1. Davis, Z.W., Muller, L., Reynolds, J. Spontaneous Spiking Is Governed By Broadband Fluctuations. (2022) Journal of Neuroscience. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1899-21.2022.

Open to
Public
Contact
Lihong Yin
Phone
(212) 327-7620
Sponsor
Winrich Freiwald
(212) 327-7697
wfreiwald@rockefeller.edu