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Attention Induced Gain Stabilization in Broad and Narrow-Spiking Cells in the Frontal Eye-Field of Macaque Monkeys.

Alexander ThieleChristian BrandtMiguel DasilvaSascha GotthardtDaniel ChicharroStefano PanzeriClaudia Distler
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
Cortical processing is critically modulated by attention. A key feature of this influence is a modulation of "cortical state," resulting in increased neuronal excitability and resilience of the network against perturbations, lower rate variability, and an increased signal-to-noise ratio. In the frontal eye field (FEF), an area assumed to control spatial attention in human and nonhuman primates, firing rate changes with attention occur, but rate variability, quantified by the Fano factor, appears to be unaffected by attention. Using recently developed analysis tools and models to quantify attention effects on narrow- and broad-spiking cell activity, we show that attention alters cortical state strongly in the FEF, demonstrating that its effect on the neuronal network is consistent across the cortical hierarchy.
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