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Stimulus Dependence of Correlated Variability across Cortical Areas.

Douglas A RuffMarlene R Cohen
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
Correlations in the responses of pairs of neurons within the same cortical area have been a subject of growing interest in systems neuroscience. However, correlated variability between different cortical areas is likely just as important. We recorded simultaneously from neurons in primary visual cortex and the middle temporal area while rhesus monkeys viewed different visual stimuli in different attention conditions. We found that correlations between neurons in different areas depend on stimulus and attention conditions in very different ways than do correlations within an area. The observed pattern of cross-area correlations was predicted by a simple normalization model. Our results provide insight into how neurons in different areas interact and constrain models of the neural computations performed across cortical areas.
Keyphrases
  • spinal cord
  • working memory
  • spinal cord injury