Gabriel Kreiman*, Chou Hung*, Rodrigo Quian Quiroga, Alexander Kraskov, Tomaso Poggio, James J. DiCarlo
Object selectivity of local field potentials and spikes in the macaque inferior temporal cortex
Neuron (2006), 49:1-13 PDF
Local field potentials (LFPs) arise largely from the dendritic activity over large brain regions and thus provide a measure of the input to and local processing within an area. We characterized LFPs and their relationship to spikes (multi- and single-unit) in monkey inferior temporal cortex (IT). LFP responses in IT to complex objects showed strong selectivity at 44% of the sites and tolerance to retinal position and size. The LFP preferences were poorly predicted by the spike preferences at the same site but were better explained by averaging spikes within ~3 mm. A comparison of separate sites suggests that selectivity is similar on a scale of ~800 microns for spikes and ~5 mm for LFPs. These observations imply that inputs to IT neurons convey selectivity for complex shapes and that such input may have an underlying organization spanning several mm.
| Department of Ophthalmology | ![]() |
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| Program in Neurobiology | ||
| Children's Hospital Harvard Medical School | ||
| Center for Brain Science, Harvard University | ||
| Swartz Center for Theoretical Neuroscience |
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