Publication | Open Access
A Disinhibitory Circuit for Contextual Modulation in Primary Visual Cortex
46
Citations
66
References
2020
Year
Unknown Venue
Som NeuronsNeural RecodingAttentionSensory SystemsVisual Cognitive NeuroscienceSocial SciencesPsychologyEarly VisionNeural MechanismSensory NeuroscienceVisual CognitionCognitive NeuroscienceDisinhibitory CircuitCognitive ScienceContext Guides PerceptionVision ResearchVisual PathwayVisual ProcessingBrain CircuitryVip NeuronsVisual FunctionNeural CircuitsPhysiologyNeuroscienceMedicine
Context guides perception by influencing the saliency of sensory stimuli. Accordingly, in visual cortex, responses to a stimulus are modulated by context, the visual scene surrounding the stimulus. Responses are suppressed when stimulus and surround are similar but not when they differ. The mechanisms that remove suppression when stimulus and surround differ remain unclear. Here we use optical recordings, manipulations, and computational modelling to show that a disinhibitory circuit consisting of vasoactive-intestinal-peptide-expressing (VIP) and somatostatin-expressing (SOM) inhibitory neurons modulates responses in mouse visual cortex depending on the similarity between stimulus and surround. When the stimulus and the surround are similar, VIP neurons are inactive and SOM neurons suppress excitatory neurons. However, when the stimulus and the surround differ, VIP neurons are active, thereby inhibiting SOM neurons and relieving excitatory neurons from suppression. We have identified a canonical cortical disinhibitory circuit which contributes to contextual modulation and may regulate perceptual saliency.
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