The coding privilege of end-spectral hues (red and blue) in the early visual cortex has been reported in primates. However, the origin of such bias remains unclear. Here, we provide a complete picture of the end-spectral bias in visual system by measuring fMRI signals and spiking activities in macaques. The correlated end-spectral biases between the LGN and V1 suggest a subcortical source for asymmetric coding. Along the ventral pathway from V1 to V4, red bias against green peaked in V1 and then declined, whereas blue bias against yellow showed an increasing trend. The feedforward and recurrent modifications of end-spectral bias were further revealed by dynamic causal modeling analysis. Moreover, we found that the strongest end-spectral bias in V1 was in layer 4C\(\beta\). Our results suggest that end-spectral bias already exists in the LGN and is transmitted to V1 mainly through the parvocellular pathway, then embellished by cortical processing.
最新重要论文
The neural origin for asymmetric coding of surface color in the primate visual cortex, Nat Commun, 15 Jan 2024
Nature Communications, 15 January, 2024, DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-44809-y
The neural origin for asymmetric coding of surface color in the primate visual cortex
Yujie Wu, Minghui Zhao, Haoyun Deng, Tian Wang, Yumeng Xin, Weifeng Dai, Jiancao Huang, Tingting Zhou, Xiaowen Sun, Ning Liu & Dajun Xing
Abstract
The coding privilege of end-spectral hues (red and blue) in the early visual cortex has been reported in primates. However, the origin of such bias remains unclear. Here, we provide a complete picture of the end-spectral bias in visual system by measuring fMRI signals and spiking activities in macaques. The correlated end-spectral biases between the LGN and V1 suggest a subcortical source for asymmetric coding. Along the ventral pathway from V1 to V4, red bias against green peaked in V1 and then declined, whereas blue bias against yellow showed an increasing trend. The feedforward and recurrent modifications of end-spectral bias were further revealed by dynamic causal modeling analysis. Moreover, we found that the strongest end-spectral bias in V1 was in layer 4C\(\beta\). Our results suggest that end-spectral bias already exists in the LGN and is transmitted to V1 mainly through the parvocellular pathway, then embellished by cortical processing.
文章链接:https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-44809-y
相关报道:/kyjz/zxdt/202401/t20240117_6959182.html