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Suppression and facilitation of human neural responses

Authors :
Anastasia V. Flevaris
Richard A.E. Edden
Michael-Paul Schallmo
Rachel Millin
Raphael Bernier
Alex Kale
Scott O. Murray
Zoran Brkanac
Source :
eLife, Vol 7 (2018), eLife
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2017.

Abstract

Efficient neural processing depends on regulating responses through suppression and facilitation of neural activity. Utilizing a well-known visual motion paradigm that evokes behavioral suppression and facilitation, and combining 5 different methodologies (behavioral psychophysics, computational modeling, functional MRI, pharmacology, and magnetic resonance spectroscopy), we provide evidence that challenges commonly held assumptions about the neural processes underlying suppression and facilitation. We show that: 1) both suppression and facilitation can emerge from a single, computational principle – divisive normalization; there is no need to invoke separate neural mechanisms, 2) neural suppression and facilitation in the motion-selective area MT mirror perception, but strong suppression also occurs in earlier visual areas, and 3) suppression is not driven by GABA-mediated inhibition. Thus, while commonly used spatial suppression paradigms may provide insight into neural response magnitudes in visual areas, they cannot be used to infer neural inhibition.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
eLife, Vol 7 (2018), eLife
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2387e92586387ab53fc35cb8f4a9b603
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/174466