Contextual modulation emerges by integrating feedforward and feedback processing in mouse visual cortex
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Di Santo, Serena; Dipoppa, Mario; Keller, Andreas; Roth, Morgane; Scanziani, Massimo; Miller, Kenneth D.Editorial
Elsevier
Materia
contextual modulation visual cortex feedback higher visual areas inhibitory subclasses
Fecha
2025-01-28Referencia bibliográfica
Di Santo, S., Dipoppa, M., Keller, A., Roth, M., Scanziani, M., & Miller, K. D. (2025). Contextual modulation emerges by integrating feedforward and feedback processing in mouse visual cortex. Cell Reports, 44(1), 115088. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2024.115088
Patrocinador
NIH U01NS108683, NIH R01EY029999, NIH U19NS107613, NSF 1707398; Gatsby Charitable Foundation GAT3708; Kavli Foundation, grant no. IJC2020-044517-I; Agencia Estatal de Investigación de España (grant no. PID2023-149174NB-I00)Resumen
Sensory systems use context to infer meaning. Accordingly, context profoundly influences neural responses to sensory stimuli. However, a cohesive understanding of the circuit mechanisms governing contextual effects across different stimulus conditions is still lacking. Here we present a unified circuit model of mouse visual cortex that accounts for the main standard forms of contextual modulation. This data-driven and biologically realistic circuit, including three primary inhibitory cell types, sheds light on how bottom-up, top-down, and recurrent inputs are integrated across retinotopic space to generate contextual effects in layer 2/3. We establish causal relationships between neural responses, geometrical features of the inputs, and the connectivity patterns. The model not only reveals how a single canonical cortical circuit differently modulates sensory response depending on context but also generates multiple testable predictions, offering insights that apply to broader neural circuitry.