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Published February 25, 2017 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Interspersed Distribution of Selectivity to Kinematic Stimulus Features in Supragranular Layers of Mouse Barrel Cortex

  • 1. Instituto de Neurociencias de Alicante UMH-CSIC, Avda. Ramón y Cajal s/n, Campus de San Juan, 03550 Sant Joan d'Alacant, Spain
  • 2. Instituto de Neurociencias de Alicante UMH-CSIC, Avda. Ramón y Cajal s/n, Campus de San Juan, 03550 Sant Joan d'Alacant, Spain; Laboratory of Neural Computation, Center for Neuroscience and Cognitive Systems @UniTn, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, 38068 Rovereto
  • 3. Instituto de Neurociencias de Alicante UMH-CSIC, Avda. Ramón y Cajal s/n, Campus de San Juan, 03550 Sant Joan d'Alacant, Spain; Sussex Neuroscience, School of Life Sciences, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK

Description

Neurons in the primary sensory regions of neocortex have heterogeneous response properties. The spatial arrangement of neurons with particular response properties is a key aspect of population representations and can shed light on how local circuits are wired. Here, we investigated how neurons with sensitivity to different kinematic features of whisker stimuli are distributed across local circuits in supragranular layers of the barrel cortex. Using 2-photon calcium population imaging in anesthetized mice, we found that nearby neurons represent diverse kinematic features, providing a rich population representation at the local scale. Neurons interspersed in space therefore responded differently to a common stimulus kinematic feature. Conversely, neurons with similar feature selectivity were located no closer to each other than predicted by a random distribution null hypothesis. This finding relied on defining a null hypothesis that was specific for testing the spatial distribution of tuning across neurons. We also measured how neurons sensitive to specific features were distributed relative to barrel boundaries, and found no systematic organization. Our results are compatible with randomly distributed selectivity to kinematic features, with no systematic ordering superimposed upon the whisker map.

Notes

This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 699829.

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Martini et al. 2017 Cerebral Cortex.pdf

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Additional details

Related works

Is supplemented by
10.6080/K02F7KCP (DOI)

Funding

ETIC – Encoding and Transmission of Information in the Mouse Somatosensory Cortex 699829
European Commission

References

  • Francisco J. Martini, Manuel Molano-Mazón, Miguel Maravall; Interspersed Distribution of Selectivity to Kinematic Stimulus Features in Supragranular Layers of Mouse Barrel Cortex. Cereb Cortex 2017 1-8. doi: 10.1093/cercor/bhx019