Thalamocortical interactions shape hierarchical neural variability during stimulus perception

The brain is organized hierarchically to process sensory signals. But, how do functional connections within and across areas contribute to this hierarchical order? We addressed this problem in the thalamocortical network, while monkeys detected vibrotactile stimulus. During this task, we quantified...

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Veröffentlicht in:iScience 2024-07, Vol.27 (7), p.110065, Article 110065
Hauptverfasser: Tauste Campo, Adrià, Zainos, Antonio, Vázquez, Yuriria, Adell Segarra, Raul, Álvarez, Manuel, Deco, Gustavo, Díaz, Héctor, Parra, Sergio, Romo, Ranulfo, Rossi-Pool, Román
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The brain is organized hierarchically to process sensory signals. But, how do functional connections within and across areas contribute to this hierarchical order? We addressed this problem in the thalamocortical network, while monkeys detected vibrotactile stimulus. During this task, we quantified neural variability and directed functional connectivity in simultaneously recorded neurons sharing the cutaneous receptive field within and across VPL and areas 3b and 1. Before stimulus onset, VPL and area 3b exhibited similar fast dynamics while area 1 showed slower timescales. During the stimulus presence, inter-trial neural variability increased along the network VPL-3b-1 while VPL established two main feedforward pathways with areas 3b and 1 to process the stimulus. This lower variability of VPL and area 3b was found to regulate feedforward thalamocortical pathways. Instead, intra-cortical interactions were only anticipated by higher intrinsic timescales in area 1. Overall, our results provide evidence of hierarchical functional roles along the thalamocortical network. [Display omitted] •Intrinsic timescales of area 3b were more similar to VPL than to area 1•Fano factor increased along the somatosensory hierarchy VPL-3b-1•VPL showed two parallel feedforward processing pathways with areas 3b and 1•Area 1 neurons showed intra-area interactions that correlated with their timescales Neuroscience, sensory neuroscience, cognitive neuroscience
ISSN:2589-0042
2589-0042
DOI:10.1016/j.isci.2024.110065