Neurons in macaque inferior temporal (IT) cortex show a decrease in the response with stimulus repetition, known as repetition suppression (RS). Several mechanisms may contribute to RS in IT, such as firing rate-dependent fatigue and transsynaptic mechanisms, like synaptic depression or reduced input from neurons within the same area or from up- or downstream areas. We examined the role of firing rate fatigue and transsynaptic mechanisms by stimulating directly IT neurons using optogenetics and measured the effect of photo-stimulation on their responses using timing parameters that resulted in RS for visual stimuli. Photo-stimulation of IT neurons resulted in a marginally decreased probability of spiking activity to a subsequent photo-stimulation or to a subsequent low-contrast visual stimulus. This response reduction was small relative to that for repeated visual stimuli and was related to post-stimulation inhibition of the activity during the interval between adapter and test stimuli. Presentation of a visual adapter did not change the response to subsequent photo-stimulation. In neurons whose response to the visual adapter was inhibited by simultaneous photo-stimulation, RS to visual stimuli was unaffected. Overall, these data imply that RS in IT has a transsynaptic origin, with little or no contribution of intrinsic firing rate fatigue. In addition, they suggest a limited contribution of both local synaptic depression and reduced input from nearby IT neurons, whose responses were postulated to be decreased by firing rate fatigue, to RS in IT.

Probing the Mechanisms of Repetition Suppression in Inferior Temporal Cortex with Optogenetics / Fabbrini Francesco; Van den Haute Chris; De Vitis Marina; Baekelandt Veerle; Vanduffel Wim; Vogels Rufin. - In: CURRENT BIOLOGY. - ISSN 0960-9822. - STAMPA. - 29:12(2019), pp. 1988-1998. [10.1016/j.cub.2019.05.014]

Probing the Mechanisms of Repetition Suppression in Inferior Temporal Cortex with Optogenetics.

De Vitis Marina;
2019

Abstract

Neurons in macaque inferior temporal (IT) cortex show a decrease in the response with stimulus repetition, known as repetition suppression (RS). Several mechanisms may contribute to RS in IT, such as firing rate-dependent fatigue and transsynaptic mechanisms, like synaptic depression or reduced input from neurons within the same area or from up- or downstream areas. We examined the role of firing rate fatigue and transsynaptic mechanisms by stimulating directly IT neurons using optogenetics and measured the effect of photo-stimulation on their responses using timing parameters that resulted in RS for visual stimuli. Photo-stimulation of IT neurons resulted in a marginally decreased probability of spiking activity to a subsequent photo-stimulation or to a subsequent low-contrast visual stimulus. This response reduction was small relative to that for repeated visual stimuli and was related to post-stimulation inhibition of the activity during the interval between adapter and test stimuli. Presentation of a visual adapter did not change the response to subsequent photo-stimulation. In neurons whose response to the visual adapter was inhibited by simultaneous photo-stimulation, RS to visual stimuli was unaffected. Overall, these data imply that RS in IT has a transsynaptic origin, with little or no contribution of intrinsic firing rate fatigue. In addition, they suggest a limited contribution of both local synaptic depression and reduced input from nearby IT neurons, whose responses were postulated to be decreased by firing rate fatigue, to RS in IT.
2019
Probing the Mechanisms of Repetition Suppression in Inferior Temporal Cortex with Optogenetics / Fabbrini Francesco; Van den Haute Chris; De Vitis Marina; Baekelandt Veerle; Vanduffel Wim; Vogels Rufin. - In: CURRENT BIOLOGY. - ISSN 0960-9822. - STAMPA. - 29:12(2019), pp. 1988-1998. [10.1016/j.cub.2019.05.014]
Fabbrini Francesco; Van den Haute Chris; De Vitis Marina; Baekelandt Veerle; Vanduffel Wim; Vogels Rufin
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/697865
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