Abstract
We characterize a hitherto undocumented type of neuron present in the regions bordering the principal layers of the macaque lateral geniculate nucleus. Neurons of this type were distinguished by a high and unusually regular maintained discharge that was suppressed by spatiotemporal modulation of luminance or chromaticity within the receptive field. The response to any effective stimulus was a reduction in discharge, reminiscent of the "suppressed-by-contrast" cells of the cat retina. To a counterphase-modulated grating, the response was a phase-insensitive suppression modulated at twice the stimulus frequency, implying a receptive field comprised of multiple mechanisms that generate rectifying responses. This distinctive nonlinearity makes the neurons well suited to computing a measure of contrast energy; such a signal might be important in regulating sensitivity early in visual cortex. Copyright © 2007 Society for Neuroscience.
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CITATION STYLE
Tailby, C., Solomon, S. G., Dhruv, N. T., Majaj, N. J., Sokol, S. H., & Lennie, P. (2007). A new code for contrast in the primate visual pathway. Journal of Neuroscience, 27(14), 3904–3909. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5343-06.2007
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