How behavioral constraints may determine optimal sensory representations

被引:52
作者
Salinas, Emilio [1 ]
机构
[1] Wake Forest Univ, Sch Med, Dept Neurobiol & Anat, Winston Salem, NC 27109 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1371/journal.pbio.0040387
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The sensory-triggered activity of a neuron is typically characterized in terms of a tuning curve, which describes the neuron's average response as a function of a parameter that characterizes a physical stimulus. What determines the shapes of tuning curves in a neuronal population? Previous theoretical studies and related experiments suggest that many response characteristics of sensory neurons are optimal for encoding stimulus-related information. This notion, however, does not explain the two general types of tuning profiles that are commonly observed: unimodal and monotonic. Here I quantify the efficacy of a set of tuning curves according to the possible downstream motor responses that can be constructed from them. Curves that are optimal in this sense may have monotonic or nonmonotonic profiles, where the proportion of monotonic curves and the optimal tuning-curve width depend on the general properties of the target downstream functions. This dependence explains intriguing features of visual cells that are sensitive to binocular disparity and of neurons tuned to echo delay in bats. The numerical results suggest that optimal sensory tuning curves are shaped not only by stimulus statistics and signal-to-noise properties but also according to their impact on downstream neural circuits and, ultimately, on behavior.
引用
收藏
页码:2383 / 2392
页数:10
相关论文
共 56 条
[1]  
ADOLPHS R, 1993, J NEUROSCI, V13, P3647
[2]   Visual cortex neurons of monkeys and cats: Temporal dynamics of the contrast response function [J].
Albrecht, DG ;
Geisler, WS ;
Frazor, RA ;
Crane, AM .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2002, 88 (02) :888-913
[3]   DIRECTION AND ORIENTATION SELECTIVITY OF NEURONS IN VISUAL AREA MT OF THE MACAQUE [J].
ALBRIGHT, TD .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1984, 52 (06) :1106-1130
[4]  
[Anonymous], 1140 AI MIT
[5]   WHAT DOES THE RETINA KNOW ABOUT NATURAL SCENES [J].
ATICK, JJ ;
REDLICH, AN .
NEURAL COMPUTATION, 1992, 4 (02) :196-210
[6]   Could information theory provide an ecological theory of sensory processing? [J].
Aticky, Joseph J. .
NETWORK-COMPUTATION IN NEURAL SYSTEMS, 2011, 22 (1-4) :4-44
[7]   Towards a Theory of Early Visual Processing [J].
Atick, Joseph J. ;
Redlich, A. Norman .
NEURAL COMPUTATION, 1990, 2 (03) :308-320
[8]   Redundancy reduction revisited [J].
Barlow, H .
NETWORK-COMPUTATION IN NEURAL SYSTEMS, 2001, 12 (03) :241-253
[9]   The ''independent components'' of natural scenes are edge filters [J].
Bell, AJ ;
Sejnowski, TJ .
VISION RESEARCH, 1997, 37 (23) :3327-3338
[10]   Eye position effects in monkey cortex .1. Visual and pursuit-related activity in extrastriate areas MT and MST [J].
Bremmer, F ;
Ilg, UJ ;
Thiele, A ;
Distler, C ;
Hoffmann, KP .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1997, 77 (02) :944-961