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Multi-structure Cortical States Deduced From Intracellular Representations of Fixed Tactile Input Patterns

Norrlid, Johanna LU orcid ; Enander, Jonas M. D. LU ; Mogensen, Hannes LU and Jörntell, Henrik LU (2021) In Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience
Abstract
The brain has a never-ending internal activity, whose spatiotemporal evolution interacts with external inputs to constrain their impact on brain activity and thereby how we perceive them. We used reproducible touch-related spatiotemporal sensory inputs and recorded intracellularly from rat (Sprague-Dawley, male) neocortical neurons to characterize this interaction. The synaptic responses, or the summed input of the networks connected to the neuron, varied greatly to repeated presentations of the same tactile input pattern delivered to the tip of digit 2. Surprisingly, however, these responses tended to sort into a set of specific time-evolving response types, unique for each neuron. Further, using a set of eight such tactile input... (More)
The brain has a never-ending internal activity, whose spatiotemporal evolution interacts with external inputs to constrain their impact on brain activity and thereby how we perceive them. We used reproducible touch-related spatiotemporal sensory inputs and recorded intracellularly from rat (Sprague-Dawley, male) neocortical neurons to characterize this interaction. The synaptic responses, or the summed input of the networks connected to the neuron, varied greatly to repeated presentations of the same tactile input pattern delivered to the tip of digit 2. Surprisingly, however, these responses tended to sort into a set of specific time-evolving response types, unique for each neuron. Further, using a set of eight such tactile input patterns, we found each neuron to exhibit a set of specific response types for each input provided. Response types were not determined by the global cortical state, but instead likely depended on the time-varying state of the specific subnetworks connected to each neuron. The fact that some types of responses recurred indicates that the cortical network had a non-continuous landscape of solutions for these tactile inputs. Therefore, our data suggest that sensory inputs combine with the internal dynamics of the brain networks, thereby causing them to fall into one of the multiple possible perceptual attractor states. The neuron-specific instantiations of response types we observed suggest that the subnetworks connected to each neuron represent different components of those attractor states. Our results indicate that the impact of cortical internal states on external inputs is substantially more richly resolvable than previously shown. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
tactile, in vivo intracellular, neocortex, cortical state, synaptic input
in
Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience
article number
677568
pages
17 pages
publisher
Frontiers Media S. A.
external identifiers
  • scopus:85108995597
  • pmid:34194301
ISSN
1662-5102
DOI
10.3389/fncel.2021.677568
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
5f4d6862-c4e5-46e5-8f1a-1d56bf771528
date added to LUP
2021-06-14 14:33:35
date last changed
2022-04-27 02:25:33
@article{5f4d6862-c4e5-46e5-8f1a-1d56bf771528,
  abstract     = {{The brain has a never-ending internal activity, whose spatiotemporal evolution interacts with external inputs to constrain their impact on brain activity and thereby how we perceive them. We used reproducible touch-related spatiotemporal sensory inputs and recorded intracellularly from rat (Sprague-Dawley, male) neocortical neurons to characterize this interaction. The synaptic responses, or the summed input of the networks connected to the neuron, varied greatly to repeated presentations of the same tactile input pattern delivered to the tip of digit 2. Surprisingly, however, these responses tended to sort into a set of specific time-evolving response types, unique for each neuron. Further, using a set of eight such tactile input patterns, we found each neuron to exhibit a set of specific response types for each input provided. Response types were not determined by the global cortical state, but instead likely depended on the time-varying state of the specific subnetworks connected to each neuron. The fact that some types of responses recurred indicates that the cortical network had a non-continuous landscape of solutions for these tactile inputs. Therefore, our data suggest that sensory inputs combine with the internal dynamics of the brain networks, thereby causing them to fall into one of the multiple possible perceptual attractor states. The neuron-specific instantiations of response types we observed suggest that the subnetworks connected to each neuron represent different components of those attractor states. Our results indicate that the impact of cortical internal states on external inputs is substantially more richly resolvable than previously shown.}},
  author       = {{Norrlid, Johanna and Enander, Jonas M. D. and Mogensen, Hannes and Jörntell, Henrik}},
  issn         = {{1662-5102}},
  keywords     = {{tactile; in vivo intracellular; neocortex; cortical state; synaptic input}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{06}},
  publisher    = {{Frontiers Media S. A.}},
  series       = {{Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience}},
  title        = {{Multi-structure Cortical States Deduced From Intracellular Representations of Fixed Tactile Input Patterns}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fncel.2021.677568}},
  doi          = {{10.3389/fncel.2021.677568}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}