4.4 Article

Stimulus selectivity and response latency in putative inhibitory and excitatory neurons of the primate inferior temporal cortex

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
卷 108, 期 10, 页码 2725-2736

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00618.2012

关键词

inferotemporal cortex; monkey; interneuron; pyramidal cell; object recognition

资金

  1. James S. McDonnell Foundation
  2. National Eye Institute Grant [R01-EY-014681]
  3. National Science Foundation Grant [SBE-0542013]
  4. Max Planck Society

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Mruczek RE, Sheinberg DL. Stimulus selectivity and response latency in putative inhibitory and excitatory neurons of the primate inferior temporal cortex. J Neurophysiol 108: 2725-2736, 2012. First published August 29, 2012; doi:10.1152/jn.00618.2012.-The cerebral cortex is composed of many distinct classes of neurons. Numerous studies have demonstrated corresponding differences in neuronal properties across cell types, but these comparisons have largely been limited to conditions outside of awake, behaving animals. Thus the functional role of the various cell types is not well understood. Here, we investigate differences in the functional properties of two widespread and broad classes of cells in inferior temporal cortex of macaque monkeys: inhibitory interneurons and excitatory projection cells. Cells were classified as putative inhibitory or putative excitatory neurons on the basis of their extracellular waveform characteristics (e.g., spike duration). Consistent with previous intracellular recordings in cortical slices, putative inhibitory neurons had higher spontaneous firing rates and higher stimulus-evoked firing rates than putative excitatory neurons. Additionally, putative excitatory neurons were more susceptible to spike waveform adaptation following very short interspike intervals. Finally, we compared two functional properties of each neuron's stimulus-evoked response: stimulus selectivity and response latency. First, putative excitatory neurons showed stronger stimulus selectivity compared with putative inhibitory neurons. Second, putative inhibitory neurons had shorter response latencies compared with putative excitatory neurons. Selectivity differences were maintained and latency differences were enhanced during a visual search task emulating more natural viewing conditions. Our results suggest that short-latency inhibitory responses are likely to sculpt visual processing in excitatory neurons, yielding a sparser visual representation.

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