Laboratory of Physiology of Cognitive Processes
2006
  • Title:Population coding of natural video stimuli in macaque V1
  • Authors:S. Panzeri; M. A. Montemurro; N. K. Logothetis
  • Title of Journal:AREADNE 2006 Research in Encoding and Decoding of Neural Ensembles
  • Year:2006
  • DOI:
Abstract
Although it is widely accepted that neurons in cortex encode information about the external world at the population level, little is still known on the structure of neuronal population codes under natural stimulation conditions. In particular, it is not known whether correlations between neurons are important for encoding information. To characterize the cortical population code underlying visual function, we recorded extracellularly the simultaneous activity of neuronal populations in primary visual cortex (V1) of an anaesthetized macaque, while the animal was viewing a video of monkeys behaving in their cages. Neuronal activity was recorded with an electrode array with approx. 1.5 mm spacing. We could record action potentials from a small cluster of neurons at each of 6 different electrodes. We computed, from 30 repeated presentations of the same video, the probability of each neuron firing in response to each part of the video. From this probability distribution of spike patterns at different times of the video, we computed the amount of Shannon’s Mutual Information I that each neuronal cluster conveyed about the sequence of visual stimuli (methods similar to that of de Ruyter et al, Science 1997). We found that each individual cluster conveyed on average 6 bits/sec of information. In addition, to understand how information from different cells is combined together, we computed the information about the video that can be extracted by observing the simultaneous activity over a small population of neural clusters. The size of the population was varied from 2 to 4, and we took the average of the information conveyed by each subpopulation with a given size. We found that the average information increased linearly with the population size. This suggests that information is conveyed at the population level, and that each neuronal cluster carries fully independent information about the visual stimuli. Then,