Attentional effects on local V1 microcircuits explain selective V1-V4 communication

Open Access
Authors
  • K.J. Friston
  • P. Fries
Publication date 01-11-2023
Journal NeuroImage
Article number 120375
Volume | Issue number 281
Number of pages 16
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences (SILS)
Abstract
Selective attention implements preferential routing of attended stimuli, likely through increasing the influence of the respective synaptic inputs on higher-area neurons. As the inputs of competing stimuli converge onto postsynaptic neurons, presynaptic circuits might offer the best target for attentional top-down influences. If those influences enabled presynaptic circuits to selectively entrain postsynaptic neurons, this might explain selective routing. Indeed, when two visual stimuli induce two gamma rhythms in V1, only the gamma induced by the attended stimulus entrains gamma in V4. Here, we modelled induced responses with a Dynamic Causal Model for Cross-Spectral Densities and found that selective entrainment can be explained by attentional modulation of intrinsic V1 connections. Specifically, local inhibition was decreased in the granular input layer and increased in the supragranular output layer of the V1 circuit that processed the attended stimulus. Thus, presynaptic attentional influences and ensuing entrainment were sufficient to mediate selective routing.
Document type Article
Language English
Related dataset Code and data for "Attentional effects on local V1 microcircuits explain selective V1-V4 communication"
Published at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2023.120375
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