Gain-control mechanisms adjust neuronal responses to accommodate the wide range of stimulus conditions in the natural environment. Contrast gain control and extraclassical surround suppression are two manifestations of gain control that govern the responses of neurons in the early visual system. Understanding how these two forms of gain control interact has important implications for the detection and discrimination of stimuli across a range of contrast conditions. Here, we report that stimulus contrast affects spatial integration in the lateral geniculate nucleus of alert macaque monkeys (male and female), whereby neurons exhibit a reduction in the strength of extraclassical surround suppression and an expansion in the preferred stimulus size with low-contrast stimuli compared with high-contrast stimuli. Effects were greater for magnocellular neurons than for parvocellular neurons, indicating stream-specific interactions between stimulus contrast and stimulus size. Within the magnocellular pathway, contrast-dependent effects were comparable for ON-center and OFF-center neurons, despite ON neurons having larger receptive fields, less pronounced surround suppression, and more pronounced contrast gain control than OFF neurons. Together, these findings suggest that the parallel streams delivering visual information from retina to primary visual cortex, serve not only to broaden the range of signals delivered to cortex, but also to provide a substrate for differential interactions between stimulus contrast and stimulus size that may serve to improve stimulus detection and stimulus discrimination under pathway-specific lower and higher contrast conditions, respectively. Stimulus contrast is a salient feature of visual scenes. Here we examine the influence of stimulus contrast on spatial integration in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN). Our results demonstrate that increases in contrast generally increase extraclassical suppression and decrease the size of optimal stimuli, indicating a reduction in the extent of visual space from which LGN neurons integrate signals. Differences between magnocellular and parvocellular neurons are noteworthy and further demonstrate that the feedforward parallel pathways to cortex increase the range of information conveyed for downstream cortical processing, a range broadened by diversity in the ON and OFF pathways. These results have important implications for more complex visual processing that underly the detection and discrimination of stimuli under varying natural conditions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2946-20.2021 | DOI Listing |
J Neurophysiol
January 2025
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Boston University, Boston, MA, 02215.
Visuocortical responses are regulated by gain control mechanisms, giving rise to fundamental neural and perceptual phenomena such as surround suppression. Suppression strength, determined by the composition and relative properties of stimuli, controls the strength of neural responses in early visual cortex, and in turn, the subjective salience of the visual stimulus. Notably, suppression strength is modulated by feature similarity; for instance, responses to a center-surround stimulus in which the components are collinear to each other are weaker than when they are orthogonal.
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