2006
DOI: 10.1523/jneurosci.2256-06.2006
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Macaque V2 Neurons, But Not V1 Neurons, Show Choice-Related Activity

Abstract: In the macaque extrastriate cortex, robust correlations between perceptual choice and neuronal response have been demonstrated, frequently quantified as choice probabilities (CPs). Such correlations are modest in early visual cortex, suggesting that CPs may depend on the position of a neuron in the hierarchy of visual processing. However, previous studies have not compared neurons with similar precision in equivalent tasks.We investigated the role of cortical hierarchy on CP using a task for which significant … Show more

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Cited by 134 publications
(160 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
(83 reference statements)
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“…Although our brief stimulus was designed to minimize non-causal contributions, our DP scores were similar, if not larger, than most reported choice probability scores (Celebrini and Newsome, 1994;Britten et al, 1996;Parker and Newsome, 1998;Dodd et al, 2001;Parker et al, 2002;Williams et al, 2003;Krug, 2004;Krug et al, 2004;Uka and DeAngelis, 2004;Liu and Newsome, 2005;Purushothaman and Bradley, 2005;Nienborg and Cumming, 2006Gu et al, 2008;Law and Gold, 2008;Cohen and Newsome, 2009;Sasaki and Uka, 2009;Price and Born, 2010). The likely reason is that the concentrated burst of firing in response to the motion pulse contained the only available information for successfully performing the task.…”
Section: Differences Between Detection Versus Discrimination Tasksmentioning
confidence: 72%
“…Although our brief stimulus was designed to minimize non-causal contributions, our DP scores were similar, if not larger, than most reported choice probability scores (Celebrini and Newsome, 1994;Britten et al, 1996;Parker and Newsome, 1998;Dodd et al, 2001;Parker et al, 2002;Williams et al, 2003;Krug, 2004;Krug et al, 2004;Uka and DeAngelis, 2004;Liu and Newsome, 2005;Purushothaman and Bradley, 2005;Nienborg and Cumming, 2006Gu et al, 2008;Law and Gold, 2008;Cohen and Newsome, 2009;Sasaki and Uka, 2009;Price and Born, 2010). The likely reason is that the concentrated burst of firing in response to the motion pulse contained the only available information for successfully performing the task.…”
Section: Differences Between Detection Versus Discrimination Tasksmentioning
confidence: 72%
“…This then allowed us to investigate whether this perceptual strategy was reflected in the neuronal response in disparity selective V2 neurons. For this, we reexamined previously reported data 14 .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The distributions of | symmetry-phase| for near and far-preferring neurons were not significantly different (P = 0.49, Kolmogorov-Smirnov test). We quantified the neuronal thresholds as described previously 5,16 , see 14 . The mean neuronal threshold for the task was slightly lower for the far-preferring neurons (mean threshold 36% ±17%) than the near-preferring neurons (mean 44% ±19%), although this difference was not statistically significant (P = 0.14, t-test).…”
Section: Choice Related Neuronal Response Reflects Task Strategymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Moreover, several studies indicate that the representation of disparity in V1 cannot account for key aspects of depth perception (Cumming and Parker, 1997Nienborg and Cumming, 2006b). …”
Section: Areal Specialization In Stereopsismentioning
confidence: 99%