Local and large-range inhibition in feature detection

Date

2009

Authors

Bolzon, D.
Nordstrom, K.
O'Carroll, D.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

The Journal of Neuroscience, 2009; 29(45):14143-14150

Statement of Responsibility

Douglas M. Bolzon, Karin Nordström, and David C. O'Carroll

Conference Name

Abstract

Lateral inhibition is perhaps the most ubiquitous of neuronal mechanisms, having been demonstrated in early stages of processing in many different sensory pathways of both mammals and invertebrates. Recent work challenges the long-standing view that assumes that similar mechanisms operate to tune neuronal responses to higher order properties. Scant evidence for lateral inhibition exists beyond the level of the most peripheral stages of visual processing, leading to suggestions that many features of the tuning of higher order visual neurons can be accounted for by the receptive field and other intrinsic coding properties of visual neurons. Using insect target neurons as a model, we present unequivocal evidence that feature tuning is shaped not by intrinsic properties but by potent spatial lateral inhibition operating well beyond the first stages of visual processing. In addition, we present evidence for a second form of higher-order spatial inhibition—a long-range interocular transfer of information that we argue serves a role in establishing interocular rivalry and thus potentially a neural substrate for directing attention to single targets in the presence of distracters. In so doing, we demonstrate not just one, but two levels of spatial inhibition acting beyond the level of peripheral processing.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Copyright © 2009 Society for Neuroscience

Access Status

Rights

License

Call number

Persistent link to this record