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Volume 16, Number 13,
Issue of July 1, 1996
pp. 4222-4230
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Mnemonic Responses of Single Units Recorded from Monkey
Inferotemporal Cortex, Accessed via Transcommissural Versus Direct
Pathways: A Dissociation between Unit Activity and Behavior
Stanislaw Sobotka and
James L. Ringo
Department of Physiology, University of Rochester Medical Center,
Rochester, New York 14642-8642
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Three macaques were trained on a task in which a sequence of single
visual images was presented serially, and the monkeys signaled whether
the image was a new or a repeated one. The optic chiasm and splenium of
the corpus callosum were transected, leaving the anterior commissure as
the only path for cortical interhemispheric transfer. Images were
presented to only one eye at a time. Re-presentations of images to the
same eye were recognized correctly in >95% of trials. A robust
stimulus-specific adaptation (i.e., a reduced response to a repeated
image) was seen in the population of single units recorded from
inferotemporal cortex during these same trials. When an
interhemispheric transfer was demanded of the animals (i.e., the
re-presentation was made to the other eye), recognition performance was
somewhat reduced, to 86% correct. Interestingly, in this situation the
stimulus-specific adaptation disappeared completely. The disappearance
occurred regardless of whether the transfer direction was from the
hemisphere ipsilateral to the recording site to the hemisphere
contralateral to the recording site, or vice versa. Thus,
stimulus-specific adaptation in inferotemporal cortex units is not
required for recognition.
Key words:
visual memory;
extrastriate cortex;
inferotemporal cortex;
macaque;
memory;
vision;
interhemispheric
relations
INTRODUCTION
Inferotemporal cortex (IT) of the monkey appears
to play an important role in visual memory processes. Severe memory
disturbances were found when IT was damaged either permanently
(Mishkin, 1966 , 1982 ; Wilson et al., 1972 ; Dean, 1974 ; Delacour, 1977 ;
Horel et al., 1987 ) or reversibly (Fuster et al., 1981 ; Horel et al.,
1987 ). Memory processes are reflected in the single-unit activity
recorded in IT (Brown et al., 1987 ; Miyashita and Chang, 1988 ; Miller
and Desimone, 1994 ). One of the most evident and widely studied is
stimulus-specific adaptation (SSA). This has also been termed
``decremental response'' (Brown et al., 1987 ) and ``adaptive
mnemonic filtering'' (Miller and Desimone, 1994 ). In this phenomenon,
the first presentation of an unfamiliar visual stimulus to a monkey
generates a stronger response than the same stimulus when it is
re-presented (Baylis and Rolls, 1987 ; Brown et al., 1987 ; Rolls et al.,
1989 ; Miller et al., 1991 ; Riches et al., 1991 ; Fahy et al., 1993 ; Li
et al., 1993 ; Sobotka and Ringo, 1993 , 1994 ).
SSA has recently been reviewed (Ringo, 1996 ).
We were interested in experimental manipulation, which would transform
this single-unit memory effect. Such a transformation, with a
simultaneous measure of behavioral memory performance, would allow an
experimental (rather than a correlational) investigation of the neural
basis of a mnemonic behavior. To this end, we took advantage of the
partially ``split-brain'' preparation to channel the sensory
information coming into IT via two widely separated routes. The partial
split-brain was created by transecting the optic chiasm and corpus
callosum, leaving an intact anterior commissure (AC). In monkeys, the
AC is fully capable of transferring visual information (Sullivan and
Hamilton, 1973 ; Gross and Mishkin, 1977 ; Doty et al., 1988 ). Thus, with
stimulation through only the eye ipsilateral to a recorded IT neuron,
visual information can reach the cell via a cascade through striate and
extrastriate areas in that hemisphere. With stimulation through only
the eye contralateral to the recorded IT neuron, information must first
advance up to IT on the contralateral side, then cross the AC to spread
out in the ipsilateral IT. If the AC is cut, in addition to the optic
chiasm and corpus callosum, almost no visual information reaches units
in IT contralateral to the viewing eye (Ringo and O'Neill, 1993 ).
Thus, with this preparation control over which eye views the stimulus
dictates which of the different routes the information will take to
IT.
We then asked what would happen when, having established SSA via
repeated presentation through one eye, the same image was presented
through the other eye. That is, what would happen if that which
initially is the same visual information got to a cell via a different
route.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Subjects. Three adult female monkeys (two
Macaca mulatta and one Macaca nemestrina) were
used in the experiment. All procedures and methods of this study were
reviewed and approved by the appropriate institutional animal care and
use committee.
Surgery. Each monkey underwent a two-stage, partially
split-brain operation in which the optic chiasm and the posterior
corpus callosum were cut leaving the AC intact (Trevarthen, 1972 ). In
the first stage, the optic chiasm was transected via a transphenoidal
approach. In a separate operation, the posterior 20 mm of the corpus
callosum was transected via a dorsal approach. The completeness of
these cuts was confirmed histologically. This surgery interrupted the
commissural fibers serving cortical visual areas, except for those
passing through the AC (Demeter et al., 1990 ).
After at least a 2 week recovery from these operations, the monkeys
were prepared for single-unit recordings. Six to eight stainless steel
guide tubes with outside diameters of 0.8 to 1.8 mm were permanently
implanted and directed toward the IT. These guide tubes penetrated and
remained 6 mm into the dorsal surface of the brain. During experimental
sessions, recording electrodes were inserted through these tubes. After
finishing the session, a stainless-steel obturator was inserted into
the guide tube and the tube was covered with a plastic housing.
For each animal, a Teflon-coated coil of multistrand, stainless-steel
wire was implanted under the conjunctiva of one eye to record eye
position using the magnetic search coil system (Robinson, 1963 ; Judge
et al., 1980 ). The guide tubes, their covers, and the connector for the
eye coil were fixed with acrylic, which was in turn fixed to the skull
using titanium and stainless-steel screws. Whenever possible, a thin
sheet of Teflon was molded to the skull to separate it from the
acrylic. The screws and guide tubes penetrated this sheet.
Histology. At the end of recording, lesions were made
through each guide tube to assist in its localization. After all
experimentation, the monkeys were given a lethal dose of barbiturate,
then perfused transcardially with saline followed by 10% formalin. The
brains were blocked stereotaxically, then removed. A small block
containing the optic chiasm was sectioned separately with a section
every 400 µm stained by the Weil method. The main blocks were
embedded into polyethylene-glycol wax, then sectioned. A section every
200 µm was mounted and stained with thionin. Figure 1
shows the regions from which unit activity was recorded in this
experiment.
Fig. 1.
Locations of recording areas in IT of the three
animals, plotted onto standard brain drawings (Winters et al., 1969 ).
Sections in each column show locations for one animal. In the monkey
presented on the left side of the figure, recording was made
only from the right hemisphere, whereas in the two others, both left
and right hemispheres were used. For these two monkeys, drawings are
projected onto one hemisphere. The coronal level of the sections is
listed with each section in millimeters anterior (A) to the
zero (interaural) plane depicted in the side view in the upper
right corner.
[View Larger Version of this Image (43K GIF file)]
Unit recording. Parylene-coated tungsten electrodes
(Microprobe) with impedance ~1 M (measured at 1 kHz) were
protected by a 0.45 mm, stainless steel guard tube and lowered to
within 5-10 mm of the recording site. A hydraulic microdrive advanced
the electrodes into IT. Recording depths were measured with respect to
the skull at the base of the brain, which was found by a single pass
with a 125 µm probe. The permanently implanted guide tubes limited
cell recordings to a few relatively well localized places in IT. No
attempt was made to recover individual electrode tracts. Initial
penetrations were devoted to finding cell-rich and cell-poor bands
between the exit of the guide tube and the dura (which could usually be
identified by a characteristic low-frequency electrical artifact
subsequent to each microdrive advance).
During one session, one or two cells were recorded using a commercial
recording and spike separation package (Datawave, Longmont, CO). When a
cell was detected, all candidate spikes were recorded with low
threshold for inclusion. Then, off-line, spikes belonging to one unit
were separated from noise and other units using up to eight different
parameters, such as spike amplitude, fit to a template, and the
coefficients of the first and second principal components.
Visual stimulation. The monkey was seated in the
experimental chair with its head held by a fixed padded face mask
mounted over the snout and by a plate behind the head, which prevented
withdrawal. Eye holes in the mask allowed each eye a view of the
stimuli and shutters controlled by rotary solenoids regulated that
view. The completeness of the block provided by the shutters was
determined by examining for light leaks from a lighted display panel
and was confirmed by running trials in which both shutters were closed.
The monkeys did not respond on such trials. These methods have
previously been shown to be effective in controlling the viewing eye
(Ringo and O'Neill, 1993 ).
One problem in comparing cell activity evoked by visual stimulation to
the two eyes in split-chiasm animals is that the eyes have different
views of the same image. This occurs because each eye functions with
just the temporal hemiretina and therefore sends on information from
only the contralateral visual field. In such a situation, it is
necessary to ensure that the same visual stimulus is given to each eye
by making the stimuli bilaterally equivalent (Hamilton et al., 1973 ;
Ringo, 1990 ). Examples of such images are those made from horizontal
lines or color bands or those constructed from many horizontally
repeated subelements. The experimental stimuli used in this study were
of this bilaterally equivalent type. Four are shown in Figure
2. These same issues arise in behavioral evaluation of
interhemispheric transfer in the split-chiasm animal. There, our
stimuli proved effective at providing equivalent inputs to the two eyes
(Ringo, 1990 ).
Fig. 2.
Four examples of the visual stimuli. Actual
stimuli were in color. The stimuli were designed so that the left and
right temporal hemiretinae had similar views.
[View Larger Version of this Image (69K GIF file)]
Procedure. A running recognition task was used (Gaffan,
1977 ). Colored transparencies were displayed on a panel 27 cm in front
of the monkey by a projector equipped with a fast shutter (opening time
<5 msec). The size of the panel and projected images was 15 × 10 cm.
Approximately 500 different bilaterally equivalent images were used.
Twenty groups, each formed from seven transparencies, were presented
during one session of cell recording, i.e., 140 trials. As we use the
term here, each trial consisted of one presentation. Between
presentations, there was a 4-5 sec intertrial interval, varied
randomly for each trial.
In each ``group of seven,'' there were five copies of the same image
(designated here as the experimental images) and two other images
different from the experimental images (designated as supplemental
images). Supplemental images were placed at random positions in the
presentation sequence within each group of seven, with the restriction
that not all five of the experimental images were to be presented in an
uninterrupted sequence. The following is an example of the presentation
sequence of 14 trials, composed of two groups of seven, with capital
letters representing images, and the subscript indicating which eye
viewed the image:
After use, a particular image was not reused for about 1 week.
The requirement for bilateral equivalence was loosened for some of the
supplemental images, because they were presented to only one eye and
only once. The supplemental images were used to space out the
repetitions of the experimental images and as probes to measure if the
monkey's response bias between new or repeat changes through the
series or session.
The task of the monkey was to press the panel when a new image was
displayed and to withhold its response when an image was repeated.
Thus, in each group of seven the monkey was rewarded for pressing in
response to the first presentation of an experimental image and to both
supplemental images. The monkey was also rewarded for correctly not
responding (nogo) to the repeated images, i.e., the 2nd,
3rd, 4th, and 5th presentations of the experimental image in each group
of seven. Rewards were squirts of ~0.5 ml of fruit juice. The monkey
was informed about incorrect responses by a ``puff'' sound. The
monkey viewed the panel monocularly. During the intertrial interval,
both shutters were closed. At the beginning of each trial, one eye
shutter was opened. One second later, a warning tone was given, and 500 msec later the eye position was checked. If gaze was within a 10°
window centered in the middle of the display panel, the image was
presented for 3 sec. If gaze was outside that window, the image was not
presented, the shutter was closed, and the trial was repeated.
Typically, <5% of trials were postponed because of such failures of
fixation. The monkey could press the panel any time within the 3 sec
display time. Not pressing the panel in that time period constituted a
nogo response.
The critical element of experimental manipulation in the present study
was the presentation of an experimental image three times to one eye,
followed by a switch in viewing eye and the presentation of the same
image twice to the new eye. This is termed the ``switching
condition'' and was used for one-half of the groups of seven. For
comparison, the other half of the groups had all five presentations of
the experimental image made to the same eye (termed the ``nonswitching
condition''). In addition, an independent distinction was made such
that in one-half of the groups, the presentations started with the eye
ipsilateral to the recorded unit, and in the other half with the eye
contralateral to the recorded unit. Thus, one-quarter of the groups of
seven had three ipsilateral presentations followed by two contralateral
presentations; one-quarter had three contralateral presentations
followed by two ipsilateral presentations; one-quarter had five
ipsilateral presentations; and one-quarter had five contralateral
presentations. These four types of groups were used in rotation. Five
rotations through all four types constituted a session.
Typically, the monkeys ran five to six sessions each week. During
experimentation, the monkeys had limited access to water. They received
measured amounts of liquid per day (adjusted individually). The weights
of the monkeys were monitored, and one day each week their access to
water was unlimited.
Data analysis. The primary dependent variable was the
spike count in the 100-400 msec period after onset of the image minus
the spike count in the period from 300 to 0 msec before the onset.
Except where specifically noted, all responses have the pre-onset spike
count subtracted on a trial-by-trial basis.
Every re-presentation of an experimental image created a situation with
a possible effect from previous exposure (memory). In the nonswitching
condition, the viewing eye is unchanging, so memory effects were simply
analyzed as a function of presentation number.
In the switching condition, the following three qualitatively different
situations were analyzed for memory effects.
1. Initial memory: the response to the first presentation of the
experimental image minus the response to the second presentation of
that image.
2. Rebound from initial memory: the response to the fourth presentation
of the experimental image minus the response to the third presentation
(for switching conditions). This measure, of course, involves a change
in viewing eye as well as a difference in previous experience. The
difference in viewing eye was compensated for by averaging an equal
number of ipsilateral-to-contralateral and contralateral-to-ipsilateral
cases.
3. Memory after rebound: the response to the fourth presentation of the
experimental image minus the response to the fifth presentation.
The time period for analysis was chosen to begin 100 msec after the
image onset, because latencies in IT are typically ~100 msec. The
analysis period was stopped at 400 msec to limit any effects from
response-related activity. The average latency for the behavioral
response (the panel push) to the first experimental image was 660 msec,
whereas 90% were longer than 524 msec.
In the analysis, differences at the p < 0.05 level
were treated as statistically significant. Our analysis of the neuronal
spike records was validated in two separate ways. First, the two
authors wrote independent programs to measure the memory effects. These
programs obtained the same values. Second, starting with a selection of
spike records, peristimulus time histograms created by the analysis
matched those from a commercial source (Datawave).
RESULTS
Cell selection
From 480 well isolated cells (123, 220, and 137 from the three
monkeys), we selected cells for further analysis that were visually
excited by both the ipsi- and contralateral stimulation and that did
not show slow drifts in responsiveness (for example, a continuous
increase or decrease of activity through the recording session). Only
excited cells were examined, because a previous analysis that included
these cells showed SSA to be much stronger in visually excited than in
visually inhibited cells (Sobotka and Ringo, 1994 ).
Cell responsiveness (calculated separately for stimulation through each
eye) was defined as the difference between averaged spike count in the
period 100-400 msec after image onset and the period 0-300 msec
before image onset. t tests were used for selection of cells
with significant excited responses from each eye. A quadratic
regression of response against sequential trial number was used to
eliminate those cells with significant drifts in responsiveness across
time (see Sobotka and Ringo, 1994 ). In this analysis, responses to the
nonrepeated supplemental images were used (40 separate images for each
cell), thereby avoiding any confound with SSA. A total of 92 cells (35, 38, and 19 from the three monkeys) qualified.
Behavioral data
The monkeys' task was to press the display/response panel for the
first presentation of an image and to withhold responses for repeated
presentations. Figure 3 shows the average percentage of
recognition responses (nogo) for the experimental images at
each of the five positions (first through fifth presentation of the
same image). Note that the monkeys, correctly, usually did not signal a
recognition to the first presentation. Data are shown in two
situations, first when all five presentations were made to the same eye
(nonswitch), and second when there was a switch of eyes after the first
three presentations (switch).
Fig. 3.
Percentage of behavioral recognition responses to
presentations of the experimental images. Two conditions are shown. The
bars on the left show recognition responses when
all images were presented to the same eye (NON-SWITCH). The
bars on the right show recognition responses
when, after the first three presentations to one eye, the last two
images were given to the other one (SWITCH). There are,
appropriately, few recognition responses to the first presentations.
The monkeys showed the most errors when they had to recognize the image
as a repeat just after the viewing eye was switched (position
4 in the switching condition).
[View Larger Version of this Image (95K GIF file)]
Recognition was clearly more difficult for the fourth presentation of
the experimental image with a switch in the viewing eye than without
the switch. After a switch of viewing eye before this fourth position,
performance dropped to 86% correct. A repeated measures ANOVA on the
monkeys' performances with the repeated presentations (i.e.,
presentations two through five) shows an overall significant effect of
presentation position (F(3,6) = 31.6;
p < 0.0005). A significant interaction between
condition (switch vs nonswitch) and position was also found
(F(3,6) = 11.0; p < 0.05).
Post hoc testing showed that, after the switch, recognition performance
was lower than after any other re-presentation (minimum
F(1,2) = 20.3; p < 0.05).
As one might expect, there was no significant difference in performance
for the first three presentations between the switching and
nonswitching conditions (F(1,2) = 0.2;
p > 0.1).
The behavioral data were also examined to determine if the monkeys
maintained a consistent strategy throughout the testing. Two issues
were addressed. First, did the animals show any change in strategy (or
bias) in trials after a change in the viewing eye, and second, did the
animals change strategy as trials progressed further into each group of
seven, i.e., as the experimental image was presented more. To examine
these issues, we analyzed the performances on the supplemental images
which, because they were presented singly and pseudorandomly in the
sequence, served as probes to measure bias. That is, if the animals
were changing their bias between recognition and novelty, it would show
up in changing performance on the supplemental images presented in
those circumstances.
Performances on supplemental images are presented in Table
1, categorized by the position of the
experimental image before which they appeared. Performance was not
significantly influenced by the position of the supplemental image as
determined by a one-factor (position, with five levels) ANOVA using the
monkeys' performances as the source of variability
(F(4,8) = 1.52; p > 0.1).
Table 1.
Percent of errors committed during presentation of
supplemental images introduced before experimental images at five
different
positions
| 1st |
2nd |
3rd |
4th |
5th |
|
| 3.5% |
6.4% |
4.7% |
2.9% |
3.9% |
|
|
Each supplemental presentation was categorized by the position of
the experimental presentation which might, pseudorandomly, have been
presented instead.
|
|
To determine whether there was any change in the strategy adopted by
the monkeys after a change in viewing eye, we examined the performances
on supplemental images after such change, compared with performances on
supplemental images still in the same position in the sequence but
without a change in the viewing eye. The errors were analyzed in a
two-factor ANOVA with the performances of the different monkeys as the
source of variability. The first factor in the analysis was condition,
change in viewing eye versus no change in viewing eye immediately
before a supplemental image. The second factor was position, a
supplemental image before the first presentation versus a supplemental
image before the fourth presentation of an experimental image (these
are the only two positions at which changes of viewing eye occurred).
The analysis showed no significant effects, i.e., no apparent shifts in
strategy. The animals' performances were not influenced by a switch in
the viewing eye (F(1,2) = 0.43;
p > 0.1). Performance also did not depend on the
position that the supplemental image occupied among the repeats of the
experimental image (F(1,2) = 0.18;
p > 0.1). Interaction between position and condition
was not significant (F(1,2) = 3.31;
p > 0.1). These results indicate that the monkeys used
a consistent strategy regardless of position in the sequence or
switching in the viewing eye.
Single-unit data
Figure 4 shows averaged peristimulus time
histograms (PSTH) from a prototypical cell in the different
experimental conditions. In the nonswitching condition, each
experimental image was presented five times to the same eye. In the
switching condition, the first three presentations were given to one
eye, whereas the last two were presented to the other eye. In the
nonswitching condition, spike frequency was greatest in response to the
first presentation of the experimental images and decreased with
repetition. In the switching condition, there was a reduced response to
the re-presentation of the image to the same eye (positions 2 and 3).
The critical point, however, is that there was a rebound from this
adaptation when an image was presented for the first time to the new
eye. The response elicited when an image was re-presented to the other
eye was like the response to a new image.
Fig. 4.
Peristimulus time histograms from an IT cell to
repeated presentations of the same image in the switching (left
column) and nonswitching (right column) condition. The
schematic drawings to the left of each PSTH show the presumed pathway
through which visual stimulation reaches the recorded cell. Open
circles represent the viewing eye; the other eye is covered. With
repetition, there was a decrease in spike activity. However, when the
viewing eye was switched (between the third and fourth presentation) a
significant rebound from the decrement was observed. Zero on the
abscissa is image onset.
[View Larger Version of this Image (38K GIF file)]
Memory effects in the period from 100-400 msec after image onset
showed similar values regardless of whether presentations were
ipsilateral or contralateral to the recorded side. Figure
5 shows the response histograms averaged across all 92 cells, which passed the qualifiers listed above. The solid curves show
the responses to ipsilateral and to contralateral first presentations,
whereas the dashed curves show the responses to repeated presentations.
While the magnitude of the response to the ipsilateral eye
(contralateral visual field) is greater, the general shape and memory
effects appear similar for ipsilateral and contralateral presentations.
Initial memory effects, i.e., the difference in response between the
first and second presentations, averaged 2.20 spikes/sec for
ipsilateral presentation of the two images and 2.18 spikes/sec for
contralateral presentation (averaged across all 92 cells). These values
were not significantly different from each other (t = 0.01; p > 0.1). The memory rebound, i.e., the
difference in response between the third presentation made to one eye
and the fourth presentation made to the other eye, did not differ
significantly for ipsilateral-to-contralateral switches and
contralateral-to-ipsilateral switches. This issue is taken up again
below. Memory after the rebound, i.e., the difference in response
between the fourth and fifth presentation when those followed a switch
in the viewing eye, averaged 2.7 spikes/sec for the ipsilateral eye and
2.8 spikes/sec for the contralateral eye. These did not differ
significantly (t = 0.1; p > 0.1).
Therefore, in subsequent analyses we present data averaged across the
particular eye used, while, of course, maintaining the distinctions
based on position in the sequence, and switching versus nonswitching
conditions.
Fig. 5.
Response time courses. Population average of the
spike density for the first presentation of the experimental stimuli to
the ipsilateral eye (IPSILATERAL 1st), the re-presentations
to the ipsilateral eye (IPSILATERAL (2nd+3rd)/2), initial
presentation to the contralateral eye (CONTRALATERAL 1st),
and the re-presentations to the contralateral eye (CONTRALATERAL
(2nd+3rd)/2). Ipsilateral and contralateral responses to both
initial and re-presentations are qualitatively similar. The
re-presentations are the average of the second and third
presentations.
[View Larger Version of this Image (18K GIF file)]
Figure 6 shows the responses in the period from 100-400
msec after the onset of the image. Average data from all 92 cells are
shown to subsequent repetitions of the same image when all five
presentations were viewed by the same eye (nonswitch) and when there
was a switch of viewing eye after the first three presentations
(switch). Statistical analysis showed highly significant memory
effects. In the switching condition, cell activity evoked by the first
presentation of the experimental images was 10.2 spikes/sec above the
baseline activity. The response was weaker when the same image was
presented a second time (8.1 spikes/sec above baseline, a 21% decrease
compared with the first presentation, t test:
n = 92; t = 3.6; p < 0.001) or a third time (7.5 spikes/sec, 27% decrease;
t = 3.6; p < 0.001).
Fig. 6.
Population average of unit responses evoked by the
five presentations of the same image in the nonswitching and switching
conditions. There is a full rebound from adaptation of the unit
activity in the fourth position in the switching condition. Values
shown are the difference between the spike rate in the period from 100 to 400 msec after the image onset and the spike rate from 300 to 0 msec
before image onset.
[View Larger Version of this Image (63K GIF file)]
When the viewing eye was switched (the fourth presentation in the
switching condition), a complete rebound from this adaptation was
observed (4th-3rd: t = 5.4; p < 0.0001). The average response to the fourth presentation (10.5 spikes/sec) was not significantly different from that to the first one
(t = 0.4; p > 0.1). In the switching
condition, the last presentation of the image but only the second
presentation to that eye again produced a decrease in cell activity
(7.8 spikes/sec, 4th-5th: t = 5.7; p < 0.0001).
The three-dimensional surface graph in Figure 7 presents
the time course of responses to the five repetitions of the
experimental images in the nonswitching and switching conditions
averaged across all cells. Spike frequency was calculated in 50 msec
time bins from 0.6 sec before until 0.6 sec after the image onset.
Fig. 7.
Three-dimensional surface map of PSTHs to the five
presentations of the experimental images. Histograms forming the map
represent averaged (across all cells and images) frequency of spikes
(in spikes/sec) in 50 msec time bins. There is a decrease of cell
activity with repetition and a rebound from this decrement in the
switching condition. Cell activity to the first presentation after the
viewing eye is switched (4) returns to the level of a new
presentation (1).
[View Larger Version of this Image (37K GIF file)]
Figure 8 shows PSTHs to the first presentation and the
three memory measurements observed in the switching condition. In the
time period from 100 to 150 msec after image onset, visual responses
were already evident (7.4 spikes/sec; t = 6.0;
p < 0.0001). In contrast, the initial memory did not
differ from zero (0.8 spikes/sec, t = 1.0;
p > 0.1). The initial memory reached significance in
the latter time period of 150-200 msec (3.1 spikes/sec;
t = 3.5; p < 0.001). The rebound from
memory and the memory after rebound had time courses similar to those
of the initial memory.
Fig. 8.
Population average of unit activity evoked by the
first presentation of the experimental images (dotted line
labeled 1st, referred to the right-hand scale) and the three
measures of memory (referred to the left-hand scale). The
continuous line depicts initial memory, the difference in
frequency of spikes between the first and second presentation. The
broken line depicts the rebound from memory, the difference
between the fourth and third presentation. The dotted line
depicts the memory after rebound, the difference between the fifth and
fourth presentation. Averaged data from all cells in 50 msec time bins
in the switching condition are shown.
[View Larger Version of this Image (26K GIF file)]
Responses via the ipsilateral eye were somewhat larger than via the
contralateral eye (overall by 1.22 times). This difference averaged out
when an equal number of ipsilateral and contralateral responses
contributed, as in the analyses above. However, for comparison of the
two types of switches (contralateral-to-ipsilateral vs
ipsilateral-to-contralateral) such averaging is not available. To allow
this comparison, we adjusted the contralateral responses up to the
level of the ipsilateral responses based on the responses to other
trials (all those in the nonswitch condition). Adjustment was made on a
cell-by-cell basis (similar results were obtained if a single, global
adjustment was calculated and used across all cells). After adjustment,
the contralateral-to-ipsilateral switch produced a rebound of 3.0 spikes/sec, while the ipsilateral-to-contralateral switch produced a
rebound of 3.7 spikes/sec. These did not differ significantly
(t = 0.3; p < 0.1).
The analysis presented previously showed a complete absence of SSA
after a switch of viewing eye. That is, after an eye switch, the next
repetition of the stimulus elicited the same response, on average, that
the very first presentation did. This result is somewhat surprising.
The analysis was done on the population of qualified cells, and that is
the best overall summary, but could conceivably hide a balance of
significantly positive and significantly negative responding individual
units. Further analysis, however, fails to support such a possibility.
Among the 92 qualified units examined individually with a t
test and a p = 0.05 significance threshold, only three
showed a significant decrease and four showed a significant increase
(comparing the first presentation with the fourth presentation, which
followed the switch in viewing eye). Given the population size (92),
one may expect approximately five such cells from chance fluctuation
alone. If instead a p = 0.01 threshold was chosen, one
cell showed significant decrease and one showed significant increase.
In this case, one may expect approximately one such cell. No cells
showed a consistent and strong enough change in either direction to
meet a p = 0.001 significance threshold. Thus, as at
the population level, there is no evidence of SSA at the individual
unit level.
The above analyses are for all the units recorded in IT. However, there
have been a number of studies implicating the more medial and ventral
sections of IT and perirhinal cortex in recognition memory (Horel et
al., 1987 ; Zola-Morgan et al., 1989 ; Gaffan and Murray, 1992 ).
Therefore, we performed a separate analysis including only those cells
recorded from the inferior temporal gyrus (these units were medial to
the anterior medial temporal sulcus but lateral to the lateral bank of
the rhinal sulcus). This subset (n = 30) showed the
same characteristics as the whole set. In the nonswitch condition,
there was a stimulus-specific reduction in the response amplitude with
increasing presentation number. More importantly, in the switch
condition there appeared to be a full recovery of response amplitude
after the switch of viewing eye (the average spike rate, above
baseline, in the 100-400 msec period after presentation for the five
positions was, in sequential order, 7.2, 5.5, 4.4, 7.0, and 5.9 spikes/sec).
Examination of the unit response data affords an opportunity to test if
our bilaterally equivalent images succeeded in providing equivalent
stimuli to the two eyes. The technique we used was to determine whether
the unit responses from stimulation through the two eyes correlated
(across images). For comparison, we measured the correlation (across
images) of responses to repeated presentations of the same image to the
same eye. This latter measure provided an estimate of the correlation
to expect from responses to perfectly similar conditions given the
amount of averaging used. A lower correlation between responses from
presentation to the two eyes compared with responses to separate
presentations to the same eye could come from two sources. First, if
the images are not fully equivalent between the two eyes, and second,
if the unit responses are different for the two separate access
pathways (one including the AC). Because we know that the second factor
plays some role, a comparison of the two correlations provides a
minimum estimate of how equivalent the images are between the eyes. We
restricted this examination to the units that were significantly
responsive to stimulation through either eye and further used only the
half of the cells that showed the strongest stimulus-specific responses
(because stimulus specificity is required to produce nonzero
correlation).
Correlations for each cell were computed after averaging the activity
to the first three and separately, the last two repetitions of each
image. We used a nonparametric (rank order) correlation to eliminate
the influence of differences in general responsiveness to ipsilateral
and contralateral presentations. For each cell, correlations were
calculated between these ranks in four different conditions: (1) the
first three images viewed by the contralateral eye followed by the last
two viewed by the ipsilateral eye; (2) contralateral to contralateral;
(3), ipsilateral to contralateral; and (4), ipsilateral to ipsilateral.
Averaged correlations across all 46 qualifying cells were 0.55 in the
ipsilateral-ipsilateral condition; 0.52 in the
contralateral-contralateral condition; 0.33 in the
ipsilateral-contralateral condition; and 0.42 in the
contralateral-ipsilateral condition. All four of those values were
significantly different from zero (in all cases, after transformations
to normalize; t > 4.5; p < 0.0001).
Thus, the correlations between responses to the first three and the
last two repeats in the switching condition are statistically
significant and only moderately less than those in the nonswitching
conditions. Considering that some of that difference in correlation
must be accounted for by the different neural pathways, this result
suggests a high similarity in the visual stimuli provided by our images
through the left and the right eye.
Another examination of the data provides a further test of whether our
images succeeded in providing equivalent stimuli, i.e., provided
independence of view. For this test, we took the groups in which the
presentations were all made to the same eye. We then asked if a cell's
SSA was greater in trials in which the gaze position on a repetition
was similar to previous gaze positions compared with the SSA from trial
in which gaze position fell outside of previous bounds. For this
analysis, we let the gaze position on all earlier presentations of the
experimental image define a box such that gaze positions within that
box were between previous gaze fixation positions (both horizontally
and vertically). Thus, for those trials in which the monkey's gaze
position (i.e., its view of the image) fell outside of this box, the
view of the image would potentially be different (as far as our images
allowed this). In fact, our images appeared sufficiently invariant for
different views to prevent significant rebound from slightly new views
of the image. There was no significant difference in the amount of
adaptation seen for trials in which the view centered inside the box
defined by previous views, compared with the adaptation found in trials
in which the view centered outside that box. This was true for all the
possible positions in the sequence of five presentations of the
experimental image (all p > 0.1; t test).
The average amplitude of the adaptation was actually slightly, but not
significantly, higher for trials in which gaze rested outside of the
previously defined box compared with trials in which gaze rested within
the box. In the 78 cells (of the main group of 92) for which we have
retained eye-position data, there was a 2.8 spike/sec reduction from
the first presentation for trials with fixation within previous limits
compared with a 3.1 spike/sec reduction from the first presentation for
trials with fixation outside of those limits.
We examined the eye position data to determine whether some consistent
difference in eye position or movement would explain the difference
between IT unit responses for the fourth presentation of the
experimental image in switch and nonswitch conditions. These positions
are shown separately for switch and nonswitch trials in Figure
9. It is apparent from Figure 9 that eye positions did
not differ between switch and nonswitch conditions. This is confirmed
by a three-factor ANOVA, with the four time points as one factor, the
two movement directions (horizontal and vertical) as the second factor,
and trial type (switch or nonswitch) as the third factor. There was no
effect of trial type on eye position
(F(1,77) = 0.55; p > 0.1)
or any interaction between trial type and other factors (all
p < 0.1). Trial-by-trial variability also did not
differ between switch and nonswitch trials, as measured by the SD of
the eye positions (which did not differ significantly).
Fig. 9.
Similarity of eye positions for switch and
nonswitch presentations (in each case the fourth in the sequence). The
average eye positions at four different times are shown for
horizontal position (A) and for vertical position
(B). The four time points (0, 100, 200, and 300 msec after
image onset) for the times of the eye position measurement correspond
to our analysis period of 100-400 msec after image onset, allowing for
a 100 msec latency from image onset to IT response. These data are
averaged across all 78 of our main group of 92 units, for which the
eye-position data were retained.
[View Larger Version of this Image (11K GIF file)]
Finally, we also examined whether the firing rates differed between
trials in which the animal made an error compared with those trials
performed correctly. No consistent effects were seen, although in many
cases so few trials with errors were available that no analysis was
possible. However, after a switch in viewing eye before the fourth
presentation of the experimental image, there were sufficient errors to
allow an examination. In that case, the average rebound was 2.4 spikes/sec on correct trials and 2.3 spikes/sec on error trials (in
both cases, averaged for those cells, n = 60, which had
at least one error in that circumstance).
DISCUSSION
In our animals, with a transected optic chiasm and corpus callosum
and an intact AC, repeated monocular stimulation to the same eye
(nonswitch condition) produced SSA in cells recorded from IT. This
effect was observed equally regardless of viewing eye.
SSA disappeared when, after three presentations to one eye, the image
was presented for the first time to the other eye. SSA disappeared
regardless of whether the initial presentations were to the
contralateral eye and the later presentation to the ipsilateral eye, or
vice versa. That is, when on the fourth presentation viewing was
switched to a new eye, SSA disappeared from IT in both hemispheres.
Nonetheless, the great bulk of images presented in that situation were
recognized by the animals. Thus, it appears that SSA in IT is not
required for recognition. The SSA disappeared in the population average
without any apparent sparing of a few ``memory'' cells. That is, our
examination of the distribution of adaptation levels for the individual
units found no more outliers than expected by chance (see Results).
Similarly, a separate analysis of units from inferior temporal gyrus
found that the switch in viewing eye eliminated SSA in that subset as
well.
These results should not be over-interpreted. It may well be that
SSA, when available, is a substantial contributor to recognition
memory. Consistent with this idea, the interhemispheric step that
(perhaps among other things) eliminated SSA, reduced performance by our
monkeys. That reduction should not be dismissed as trivial. A drop from
99% correct to 86% correct, with a 10% false-positive rate, is a
drop from 3.61 to 2.32 in d terms. The possibility that cells in other
areas might still show SSA (which did not feedback or forward strongly
enough to our IT units to influence recordings) is an interesting one
to be pursued in future studies.
It should be noted that the above conclusion does not depend on what
caused the disappearance of the SSA. Whatever one may suppose to have
caused that disappearance, the situation was created in which
behavioral recognition occurred in the absence of SSA in IT units.
Nonetheless, a number of explanations seem unlikely. First, it seems
unlikely that the animal changed its strategy when the viewing eye was
switched, because the behavior to the probe stimuli did not change
(Table 1). Second, it seems unlikely that the pattern of eye position
changed with the switch because the average position and its SD are not
different in switch and nonswitch trials (Fig. 9).
It is interesting to consider these results in terms of neural
populations and assemblies. The disappearance of SSA after switching
the viewing eye suggests a specificity to the memory pathway in this
case. The failure of the SSA to generalize across viewing eye seems
unlikely to be fully explicable in terms of ipsilateral/contralateral
differences in the receptive fields or response specificities of the
units involved. This is because the units we examined were responsive
through either eye and showed well correlated response specificity
between ipsilateral and contralateral views, as would be expected based
on previous work (Gross and Mishkin, 1977 ). Nonetheless, the memory
traces forming the SSA were retrieved only when the input came through
the same visual pathway with which they were originally encoded.
FOOTNOTES
Received Dec. 26, 1995; revised April 1, 1996; accepted April 5, 1996.
This work was supported by Grants NS24217 and NS26526 from the National
Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke. Sincere thanks to Chris
Bunce, Mark Diltz, and Steve O'Neill for expert technical assistance
and to Robert Doty for valuable discussion.
Correspondence should be addressed to James L. Ringo, Box 642, Department of Physiology, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY
14642-8642.
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