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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 1, 2002, 22(13):5659-5668
Disinhibition Outside Receptive Fields in the Visual Cortex
Gary A.
Walker,
Izumi
Ohzawa, and
Ralph D.
Freeman
Group in Vision Science, School of Optometry, University of
California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720-2020
 |
ABSTRACT |
By definition, the region outside the classical receptive field
(CRF) of a neuron in the visual cortex does not directly activate the
cell. However, the response of a neuron can be influenced by
stimulation of the surrounding area. In previous work, we showed that
this influence is mainly suppressive and that it is generally limited
to a local region outside the CRF. In the experiments reported here, we
investigate the mechanisms of the suppressive effect. Our approach is
to find the position of a grating patch that is most effective in
suppressing the response of a cell. We then use a masking stimulus at
different contrasts over the grating patch in an attempt to disinhibit
the response. We find that suppressive effects may be partially or
completely reversed by use of the masking stimulus. This disinhibition
suggests that effects from outside the CRF may be local. Although they
do not necessarily underlie the perceptual analysis of a
figure-ground visual scene, they may provide a substrate for
this process.
Key words:
visual cortex; receptive field; nonclassical receptive
field; figure-ground; disinhibition; single cortical neurons
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Behavioral tests of human subjects
demonstrate that the spatial and temporal context of a visual stimulus
may exert a clear influence on perception. For example, flanking
contours can reduce stereoscopic acuity, and effects can be observed
for both spatial and temporal parameters (Butler and Westheimer, 1978
).
Physiological studies also suggest the role of context in the responses
of single neurons. Although the classical receptive field (CRF) is, by
definition, the only area within which one can activate an individual
fiber or neuron, the region beyond this area can modulate the response (for review, see Allman et al., 1985
). Some cells have been reported to
respond more vigorously when the stimulus patterns within and outside
the CRF are perceptually different. These response modulations have
been observed in neuronal activity associated with perceptual "pop-out" or "figure-ground" stimuli (Nothdurft, 1991
;
Knierim and van Essen, 1992
; Lamme, 1995
; Zipser et al., 1996
; Kastner et al., 1997
). In these cases, neuronal discharge is weaker when the
CRF and surround areas (center and background) are perceptually identical. Reports have also been made of increased neuronal responses when perceptually relevant line segments are presented outside the CRF
(Polat et al., 1998
). Furthermore, reversible inactivation of MT
suggests a possible feedback role in figure-ground segregation (Hupe
et al., 1998
).
The notion of contextual modulation of visual processing, based on
figure-ground image analysis, is appealing. However, it is possible
that simple local mechanisms, such as those involved in
cross-orientation suppression (DeAngelis et al., 1992
), may account for
the reported findings. In a local mechanism, an inhibitory effect is
solely dependent on stimuli in local regions generating the inhibitory
signal. The strength of surround inhibition is strictly related to
activation levels of cells with CRFs in the surround area. Regarding
contextual effects in primary visual cortex, results of a recent study
suggest that V1 neurons do not segregate figures from ground (Rossi et
al., 2001
).
Aside from perceptual implications, the nature of interactions between
the CRF and surround areas is of primary interest. We conducted the
experiments described here to investigate the characteristics of the
local inhibitory surround effects that we identified previously
(DeAngelis et al., 1994
; Walker et al., 1999
, 2000
). Specifically, can
the suppressive effects of regions outside the CRF be reversed by use
of appropriate stimuli? We are also interested in potential mechanisms
both within and outside the CRF that may account for interactive effects.
Our primary finding is as follows. When a cell is suppressed by
stimulation outside the CRF, a reversal of this effect may be brought
about by the addition of a masking stimulus positioned in the
surrounding region of the CRF. This disinhibition can restore the
response of the cell to the level obtained with optimal stimulation of
the CRF by itself. We propose that the suppression from the surrounding
region of the CRF is distinct from the contrast normalization process
that is thought to be a primary mechanism within the CRF (Heeger, 1992
;
Carandini et al., 1997
, 1999
).
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Physiological preparation. Experiments were conducted
using anesthetized, paralyzed cats. Before anesthesia, acepromazine maleate (0.5 mg/kg) and atropine sulfate (0.06 mg/kg) are injected subcutaneously to provide tranquilization and to suppress secretion, respectively. Anesthesia is induced and maintained during surgery with
2-4% isoflurane. Forepaw femoral veins are cannulated for intravenous
infusion, a tracheal tube and a rectal thermometer are inserted, and
electrocardiographic (ECG) leads and electroencephalographic (EEG)
screw electrodes are placed. A craniotomy is performed around Horsley-Clarke coordinates P4L2, and the dura is carefully removed. Commercial insulated tungsten microelectrodes are positioned just above
the surface of the cortex. The craniotomy is filled with agar and
sealed with wax.
Animals are artificially respirated at ~25 strokes/min with a mixture
of N2O (70%) and O2
(30%). Anesthesia and paralysis are maintained by intravenous infusion
of a mixture of thiopental sodium (Pentothal, 2.5% solution; 1.4 mg · kg
1 · hr
1)
and gallamine triethiodide (Flaxedil, 2% solution; 9.4 mg · kg
1 · hr
1),
combined with a 5% dextrose and lactated Ringer's solution (0.5 ml · kg
1 · hr
1).
Steady-state hydration is provided by a drip system through which
lactated Ringer's solution is infused (10 ml · kg
1 · hr
1).
Core body temperature is maintained near 38°C, and end-tidal CO2 at 4-4.5%. EEG, ECG, heart rate, core body
temperature, and expired CO2 are monitored
continuously. The pupils are dilated with 1% atropine sulfate, and
nictitating membranes are retracted with 5% phenylephrine
hydrochloride. Contact lenses (+2D) with 4 mm artificial pupils
are placed on both corneas. The contact lenses are removed and cleaned
periodically, and the clarity of the refractive media is checked with a
direct ophthalmoscope. Chloromycetin (1.50 ml/d) is given
prophylactically every 12 hr.
Experimental apparatus. Visual stimuli are displayed on a
tangent screen in front of the animal or on two separate cathode ray
tube (CRT) displays, allowing independent stimulation of each eye. A
manually controlled joystick is used in preliminary tests of the
receptive field (RF) to sweep a bar stimulus of variable size and
orientation in any position and direction.
A visual stimulator generates images on each CRT display independently.
The stimulator consists of a personal computer with two high-resolution
graphics boards and runs custom software. The frame refresh rate of
each CRT display is 76 Hz, and both displays are refreshed
synchronously. Stimuli are delivered with a temporal resolution of one
frame period (13.2 msec) by custom temporal modulation driver software.
The spatial resolution is 1024 × 804 pixels. The usable portion
of the display subtends an area of 28 × 22° (viewed at 57 cm),
and the mean luminance at the front surface of each contact lens is 23 cd/m2.
For presentations requiring two superimposed gratings, the component
gratings are displayed on alternate scan lines (line interleaving) to
avoid any interaction of the two components resulting from the
bandwidth limitations of the video amplifiers in the displays (Pelli
and Zhang, 1991
). This line interleaving method of producing a plaid
results in an effective contrast that is 50% of the nonline
interleaving contrast. Thus, an 80% contrast grating without line
interleaving is a 40% contrast grating when presented with line interleaving.
Microelectrodes are inserted via a guide tube and advanced through the
cortex by a piezoelectric micropositioner. Custom-made digital
signal-processing software is used to discriminate individual action
potentials. This software allows accurate discrimination of individual
spikes from multiple cells. After discrimination, each action potential
is recorded as a binary event, time stamped with 1 msec accuracy, and
stored for analysis off-line.
Procedures. A cell is encountered, and the spike waveform is
isolated. Location and approximate orientation preference of the CRF
are determined. An interactive search program (DeAngelis et al., 1993
)
is then used to determine suitable parameters for a circular patch of
drifting sinusoidal grating. The grating patch is presented on the CRT,
and the size, orientation, and spatial frequency of the grating are
adjusted by the experimenter to determine preferred values.
The subjective tests are followed by quantitative analysis of the CRF.
Grating stimuli are presented monocularly for 4 sec at a time (temporal
frequency is 2 Hz for all gratings) in blocks of randomly interleaved
trials. The size of the stimulus for these initial presentations is
typically 5-8° in diameter Each stimulus is presented at least four
times, and successive presentations are separated by 3 sec, during
which the animal views blank screens of the same mean luminance as the
gratings. After presentation of a complete set of stimuli, the DC (mean
rate) and first harmonic (at 2 Hz) components of the accumulated
response are computed for each stimulus. Response amplitude is defined
as the greater of the mean firing rate or the amplitude of the first
harmonic of the response. Simple and complex cell designations are
determined by classical criteria (Hubel and Wiesel, 1962
) and by the
ratio of the first harmonic and mean of the response to a drifting
grating stimulus (Skottun et al., 1991
).
Orientation tuning of the CRF is determined by use of a series of
drifting grating stimuli, differing in orientation around the initial
orientation estimate. Spatial frequency and size for this run are set
to the initial values obtained using the search program. The peak of
the resultant tuning curve is used as the optimal orientation for
subsequent presentations. Preferred spatial frequency for the cell is
similarly determined.
Optimal orientation, spatial frequency, and size for CRF stimulation
were determined quantitatively for each cell from the preliminary runs.
In this work, "optimal stimulus" is used to refer to a
drifting grating with orientation, spatial frequency, and size
parameters set to the values that elicit the greatest response from the
cell. Contrast was set at an intermediate value that varied from cell
to cell but was typically ~30%. Sinusoidal gratings were drifted for
4 sec at a temporal frequency of 2 Hz. After the optimal stimulus was
determined for each cell, the size of the CRF was estimated by
presenting a drifting grating within a circularly bounded window of
variable size. The resultant size-tuning curve yields an estimate of
the spatial dimensions of the CRF and also the degree of surround
suppression (Walker et al., 2000
).
Spatiotemporal maps of the CRF were also obtained for some cells using
either the reverse correlation (DeAngelis et al., 1993
) or m-sequence
(Sutter and Tran, 1992
; Anzai et al., 1997
) methods. These maps were
used to verify the accuracy and reliability of the parameters obtained
with grating stimuli. One particular advantage of these maps is that
they provide very accurate information about the center and size of the
CRF. In general, we find excellent agreement between the grating and
noise measurements.
 |
RESULTS |
Results reported here come from a pool of multiprotocol
experiments. For the current study, we completed 29 monoptic protocol runs from 24 cells (nine simple and 15 complex). From five cells, tests
were run for left and for right eyes. These 24 cells were studied
because they all exhibited some degree of surround suppression.
Experimental predictions based on alternative notions of RF surround
organization are illustrated in Figure 1.
In Figure 1A1, the CRF is
stimulated with an optimal grating, causing a strong response from the
cell. Predicted responses (action potentials) are depicted
schematically by vertical lines under each RF
icon. In A2, the cell is also
stimulated by an optimal grating, but in this case, it covers the CRF
plus the surround. The surround is inhibitory, and the response of the
cell is therefore reduced compared with that in
A1. In A3 and
A4, gratings are presented outside the CRF
at optimal and orthogonal orientations, respectively. The cell does not
respond in either case. In A5, the region
outside the CRF is covered by two gratings, one at an optimal
orientation and a second at an orthogonal one. As before, these outer
gratings do not drive the cell because they are not within the CRF.
Because surround suppression is generally tuned to an orientation that matches the preferred value of the CRF (DeAngelis et al., 1992
; Li and
Li, 1994
), the orthogonal grating (A4) is
not likely to cause suppression. However, perceptually, the pair of
orthogonal gratings constitutes a plaid pattern that is distinct from
that of the grating within the CRF. It therefore constitutes a central figure (the optimal grating) against a plaid texture background. The
figure-ground notion is that RF surrounds are required to differentiate between salient features of a scene. The figure of
attention is presumed to activate cortical neurons selectively, whereas
background components cause weak activity. Therefore, according to the
figure-ground model of A5, the cell
exhibits a strong response. The alternative model, which we designate
"disinhibition," also indicates a vigorous response. In this case,
cells in the region outside the CRF are stimulated by the large grating
of optimal orientation, and the activity in these "surround" cells is relayed to the "center" cell via inhibitory connections.
However, the suppression is neutralized by the orthogonal grating
attributable to cross-orientation suppression (Morrone et al.,
1982
; Bonds, 1989
; DeAngelis et al., 1992
; Walker et al., 1998
). Cells
contributing to surround suppression are therefore inactivated or
disinhibited to some degree by the presence of the additional
orthogonal grating. Therefore, the reduced suppression results in a
strong response from the cell whose CRF is within the surround.

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Figure 1.
RF configurations are shown for different
conditions of stimulation of the CRF and the surround. CRFs are
represented as squares with lines through
them to indicate preferred orientations. Predicted responses for given
conditions are depicted below each RF as schematic spike discharges. In
A1, the cell is activated by a
drifting grating of optimal parameters that fills the CRF. In
A2, a large grating of the same
parameters covering the CRF and surround elicits a relatively weak
response attributable to suppression from the area outside the CRF.
Stimulation of the surround alone, in
A3 (at optimal orientation) and
A4 (at an orthogonal orientation),
produces no response. Combining both surround orientations (stimuli
A2,
A4), producing the plaid surround and
optimal orientation center in A5,
causes a response equivalent to that in
A1. This result is predicted for both
figure-ground and disinhibition models. In
B1, optimal stimulation of the CRF is
shown again. Suppression of the optimal response is indicated in
B2 by the addition of a section of
optimal grating into a suppressive surround region on one end of the
CRF. The same section of grating, at optimal and orthogonal
orientations (B3,
B4) presented outside the CRF causes
no response. The combination of patterns
B2 and
B4, shown in
B5, causes different response
strengths for figure-ground and disinhibition models. In
C1, optimal stimulation of the CRF is
shown again as is the suppression of the optimal response by the large
grating in C2. In
C3, this cell is equally suppressed by
a grating that is limited to one "end" of the surround. Stimulation
of the end region alone with a grating orthogonal to the optimal yields
no response (C4). Finally, stimulation
of the center and surround with a large grating of optimal parameters,
together with an orthogonal grating over the suppressive end causes
different responses for figure-ground and disinhibition models.
|
|
The conditions illustrated in Figure 1B are similar
to those of Figure 1A, except that the stimuli
outside the CRF are limited to a small region from which suppression of
the cell has been localized instead of being presented in the entire
surround. This configuration is of interest because many cells receive
surround inhibition from a small localized area neighboring the CRF
(Walker et al., 1999
). In B1, the CRF is
activated by an optimal grating. The grating is extended in
B2 but only from one edge of the CRF. This
suppresses the response of the cell as in the case of the full surround
shown in Fig. A2. Grating patches outside
the CRF, depicted in B3 and
B4, do not activate the cell. In
B5, a combination of stimuli
B2 and B4, is
depicted. The predicted response of the cell to an optimal grating in
the CRF together with the surround patch is different for the
figure-ground and disinhibition models. Because there is no salient
figure-ground distinction, the response of the cell should be
relatively weak. However, the disinhibition model predicts a strong
response because the orthogonal grating patches outside the CRF should
neutralize each other.
In Figure 1C1, an optimal grating fills
the CRF and elicits a strong response. A large optimal grating
(C2) covering the CRF and surround yields
a relatively weaker response. If the cell has an asymmetrical surround
as described previously (Walker et al., 1999
), then a small portion of
the surround can suppress the response to the same degree as that of
the entire annulus (C3). A grating that is
orthogonal to the optimal, positioned outside the CRF, has no effect
(C4), and the cell does not respond. In
C5, a combination of stimuli
(C2 and C4),
a large optimal grating covers the CRF and surround. In addition, a
small orthogonal grating patch is positioned on one side of the
surround. Assuming that stimulation of this region with an optimal
grating causes suppression of the response, then the addition of an
orthogonal (cross-orientation) patch should reverse the suppression.
This effect is predicted by the disinhibition model, and, in this case,
the cell should exhibit a strong response. However, in the
figure-ground model, a poor response is predicted because only a small
local patch of the surround is clearly different from the CRF and the
"figure" (plaid) is outside the CRF in this case (Lamme, 1995
).
Full-field stimulation and masking
Figure 2 shows responses from a
complex cell (A) and two simple cells (B,
C). Testing conditions include stimulation of the CRF alone
(icon 1), the CRF plus surround (icon 2), and the
CRF plus surround, which contains an orthogonal grating in addition to
the optimal one to form a plaid (icon 3). The experiments
were performed at seven or eight contrast levels for the orthogonal surround grating. With increased contrast of the orthogonal grating, the perceptual saliency of the plaid becomes stronger so that, when the
contrasts are matched, the image attains a strong figure-ground appearance, as illustrated in icon 3. At the highest
contrasts, the orthogonal grating dominates the surround, although the
plaid is still apparent. Contrasts used for the optimal grating were 30% for the two cells shown in A and B and 20%
for the cell given in C.

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Figure 2.
Three examples are illustrated of the effect of
contrast of the surround grating on the responses of cells. Examples of
typical stimuli are shown above the plots and represent the
Center Alone (icon 1) and
Center + Surround (Ctr + Surr; icon 2) baseline measure shown on
the plots by dashed lines. Also shown is an example of
the disinhibition stimulus (icon 3). This example
depicts the test pattern when the orthogonal grating matches the
contrast of the optimal grating. A, A complex cell
exhibits strong suppression that is fully disinhibited with a
high-contrast orthogonal grating. B, A simple cell is
completely suppressed by the optimal surround. The response is strongly
disinhibited but only recovers approximately half of the optimal
response. C, Responses of a binocular simple cell are
illustrated in which both eyes exhibit surround suppression anddisinhibition. The left eye (LE;
filled symbols) is dominant and is strongly suppressed
by the optimal surround grating. Minor recovery is observed for this
eye. For the nondominant right eye (RE; open
symbols), the cell fully recovers an optimal response with a
high-contrast orthogonal surround grating. The
arrowheads on the x-axis denote the
contrast of the optimal grating. SA, Spontaneous
activity.
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In general, the data show two trends. First, when the orthogonal
surround grating is absent, or of low contrast, the cell responds well
below the level obtained with center stimulation alone. This is an
example of standard surround suppression. Second, when the contrast of
the orthogonal grating equals or exceeds that of the optimal grating
(Fig. 2, upward arrow on x-axis), the
response increases, i.e., is disinhibited.
To explore a range of disinhibition effects, the tests were conducted
using contrast levels for the CRF grating that elicited robust
responses but which did not saturate. The resulting discharge rates
were maintained during the multiple measurements. Generally, we used
contrast levels of ~30%. We refer to the response levels elicited in
this manner as "optimal." In fact, greater responses could be
obtained in some cases using higher contrast gratings. Examples of the
range of disinhibition that we observed are shown in Figure 2. For the
complex cell shown in A, the response is fully disinhibited
by the orthogonal grating at the highest contrasts. In other words, the
response is equal to that for stimulation of the CRF alone. The net
effect is slightly more than a doubling of the response compared with
the full-field optimal grating. The simple cell shown in B
provides an example of partial disinhibition. This cell is completely
suppressed by the optimal surround stimulus. The disinhibition is
robust, but the cell only recovers approximately half of the optimal
response. The simple cell shown in C was tested through both
the dominant and nondominant eyes. Strong suppression is observed
through the dominant left eye, and minor disinhibition is seen. For the
nondominant right eye, the disinhibition is approximately equivalent in
terms of the change in spikes per second, but, because the response
rate is much lower, the disinhibition provides a complete recovery of
the optimal response for stimulation through that eye.
To summarize the results across the population of cells studied, each
response is normalized to the response of the full-field optimal
grating. By using this stimulus as the baseline, i.e., the cell is in a
suppressed state, we determine the effect of the orthogonal grating.
Figure 3 shows the population results for
29 data sets. In Figure 3A, the amount of change in response is given for each cell for different contrast levels of the orthogonal surround grating. These plots illustrate two general properties that
are observed for nearly every cell. At low contrasts, the orthogonal
grating has no effect, and responses remain suppressed. At moderate and
high contrasts, the orthogonal grating has a clear disinhibition
effect. For example, at 32% contrast, when the orthogonal and optimal
gratings are of nearly equal strength in the surround, 23 of 29 cells
show an increase in response relative to the suppressed state. At the
highest contrast level, 64%, 26 of 29 cells respond above the
suppressed baseline level. Table 1 shows
all of the response increases and decreases at different contrast
levels.

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Figure 3.
A summary is shown of disinhibition with
full-field optimal gratings and annular, orthogonal gratings (29 data
sets). In A, the responses from each cell are normalized
to the response to the large optimal grating [center plus surround
(Ctr + Surr)], so
1 on the plot is the baseline response when an
optimal grating that covers both the center and surround is presented.
The open triangles reflect the median value at each
contrast level (slightly offset to the right for visibility). The
median gives a more conservative estimate of the effect than the mean,
which can be skewed by the cells with large changes in response. The
one curve that rises dramatically beginning at 4%
contrast reaches a peak of 29.2 times the suppressed response. This
enormous increase in response is attributable partly to an almost
complete suppression by the surround. The response of the cell is given
in Figure 2B. For comparison, the cell in Figure
2A responds 2.1 times greater in the plaid
condition compared with the optimal center plus surround condition. The
mean and median change in response at 80% contrast of the orthogonal
surround grating is 2.99 and 1.89, respectively. In B,
histograms are given of the numbers of cells for which response
increased (open bars) or decreased (shaded
bars) when an orthogonal grating of different contrasts is
superimposed on the optimal grating in the area outside the CRF. In
C, a suppression index is plotted against a
disinhibition index. The suppression index is defined as follows:
(RC+S/Ropt) × 100%, where RC+S is the response to the
full-field stimulus covering the center and surround, and
Ropt is the response of the cell to the
optimal stimulus presented to the center alone. The disinhibition index
is defined as follows:
(RC+plaid/Ropt) × 100%, where RC+plaid is the response to
the optimal stimulus presented in the center and the plaid stimulus (at
80%) presented in the surround. Ropt is as
defined above. With this index, a value of 0 indicates no response from
the cell, 100 indicates that the response with the plaid is equal to
Ropt, and values above 100 indicate
responses that are stronger than Ropt.
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In Figure 3A, the median values of the population are
indicated at each contrast level by the triangles (slightly
shifted to the right for clarity). The median is plotted because it is a more conservative estimate of the effect than the mean. The mean
indicates a larger effect, but it is heavily weighted by the cells with
pronounced disinhibition. To compare the population distributions at
various contrasts, the data at 1% contrast are used as the null
conditions, and nonparametric sign-rank tests have been performed for
all pairwise combinations. The distributions are not significantly
different at the three lowest contrasts (p
0.05 for 2, 4, and 8%) but are different for the highest contrasts at high
significance levels (p < 0.02 at 16%;
p < 0.02 at 32%; p < 0.008 at 64%;
p < 0.002 at 80%). These data demonstrate that the
disinhibition effect can be very substantial. For our population, the
addition of high contrast masking gratings results in a nearly doubling
of the response of the median cell (1.89).
In Figure 3B, a histogram is given showing the number of
cells with increased (open bars) or decreased (shaded
bars) responses when an orthogonal grating of different contrasts
is superimposed on the optimal grating in the surround region of the
CRF. To convey an indication of the extent of these effects, we
consider an arbitrary criterion as follows. Disinhibition that causes a
doubling or greater of response strength is indicated in Table 1. In
Figure 3C, the strength of suppression is plotted against
the strength of disinhibition. A suppression index is used as a metric
for suppression strength, and a disinhibition index is computed as a
measure of disinhibition strength. The scatter plot is fit using linear
regression and indicates that, to a first approximation, the effect of
disinhibition is equivalent across all cells, regardless of the
strength of surround suppression.
The robust effects described above are consistent with both
figure-ground and disinhibition models because both predict stronger responses in the full surround configuration (Fig.
1A5). These results demonstrate
that a nonpreferred stimulus that does not drive the cell, when placed
in a portion of the visual field that the cell does not respond to,
causes the response of the cell to increase. In the figure-ground
model, high-level feedback mechanisms are proposed to account for this
effect (Zipser et al., 1996
; Hupe et al., 1998
). To further explore CRF
and surround interactions and to differentiate between figure-ground
and disinhibition models, we conducted tests in which only selected
portions of the surround are stimulated.
Partial surround masking
In previous work, we determined that, for most cortical cells, a
relatively small region outside the CRF is as effective in suppressing
the response of a cell as an entire annulus (Walker et al., 1999
). We
therefore decided to see whether the specific small region outside the
CRF can be disinhibited, as in the case of the full annulus. Figure
4 illustrates disinhibition for a cell
under two different surround configurations. In the first case
(A), the cell was stimulated with a full-field (15°
diameter) optimal grating covering the center and surround. As the
graph shows, complete disinhibition of the response of the cell was obtained with this configuration. In the second case
(B), the experiment was repeated, but with the
orthogonal grating presented only to the suppressive portion of the
surround. This suppressive portion was determined from previous
surround mapping runs (Walker et al., 1999
). All of the surround
suppression for this cell arises from the bottom portion of the
surround (see icon 3). Therefore, a second stimulus
configuration was used for the disinhibition test, as shown in
icon 4. The optimal grating covers the CRF and extends into
the suppressive end. The orthogonal grating covers only the suppressive
region. Again, complete disinhibition is found. This indicates clearly
that it is not necessary to stimulate the entire surround to induce
both surround suppression and disinhibition. It also shows that
figure-ground saliency is not required to obtain the same effect as
that for Figure 4A (for which figure-ground saliency
is high). Note that, for both stimulus configurations, the response
reached the level obtained with the optimal grating presented to the
CRF alone.

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Figure 4.
An example is given of disinhibition with two
different stimulus configurations for one neuron. A,
Disinhibition is observed with the full-field optimal grating (CRF plus
surround) and annular orthogonal grating surrounding the CRF
(icon 2). The control response is the mean response from
optimal stimulation limited to the CRF and the orthogonal grating
presented to the surround at the various contrast levels used in the
test conditions (icon 1). Note that the orthogonal
grating, presented alone, has no effect on response of this cell to the
optimal center stimulus. B, The experiment is repeated,
but this time, only the suppressive portion of the surround is used.
The surround mapping reveals strong asymmetric suppression
predominantly from the bottom end of the RF (icon 3,
which shows the CRF and a hatched inhibitory region).
The actual stimulus configuration used is shown in icon
4. The responses show total disinhibition of the suppression.
For this run, the control condition consists of optimal stimulation of
the center and orthogonal grating stimulation over the bottom of the
surround. The contrast of the optimal grating is 30% in both cases and
is indicated by arrows on the
x-axis.
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To ensure that our surround stimulus was not directly
driving the cell, we included the following control condition. On
separate trials, an orthogonal grating was presented in the surround at the same contrasts as for the test conditions, with or without the
optimal grating restricted to the CRF. This allowed us to examine the
effect of the orthogonal grating by itself. In most cases, orthogonal
gratings had no effect on the cells; they neither increased nor
decreased the response at any contrast. In a few cases, the orthogonal
grating caused suppression. Generally, this was attributable to an
error in centering, and the suppression disappeared when the experiment
was repeated with new center coordinates. However, in two cases, cells
were suppressed by orthogonal surround stimuli and exhibited
disinhibition when the orthogonal grating was combined with the optimal
grating in the surround. For the stimulus configurations shown in
Figure 4, the control condition had negligible effect on the
response of the cell. The mean of the response to the control condition
at all contrast levels is indicated by solid horizontal
lines on the plots.
Figure 5 summarizes the results obtained
when only a portion of the surround is masked with an orthogonal
grating. In A, the normalized responses from two cells are
plotted. Both of these cells were tested with a limited portion of the
surround stimulated, based on detailed mapping (see icon 1).
These cells display a clear disinhibition effect that exceeds that of
the population median with full-field stimulation (open
triangles). These results show that it is not necessary to
stimulate the entire surround to get a pronounced effect. Furthermore,
there does not need to be a figure-ground component in the image. The
stimulus shown here does not convey a pop-out or figure-ground
impression.

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Figure 5.
A summary is shown of cells tested with the
orthogonal grating limited to small portions of the surround. In
A, normalized responses from two cells are illustrated,
along with the population median data (open triangles)
for the full-field condition. These cells were tested with rectangular
grating patches that extended only into the suppressive portion of the
surround (icon 1). Both cells exhibit marked
disinhibition that exceeds the median population change.
B, Normalized responses are shown from three cells
tested with the configuration shown in icon 2. In these
cases, the optimal grating covers the entire center and surround,
whereas the orthogonal grating covers only the suppressive portion of
the surround. The open triangles are the population
median values.
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Another stimulus configuration was tested for three cells for which
surround mapping revealed clear spatial asymmetries. We stimulated the
entire center and surround with an optimal grating while placing an
orthogonal grating over just the inhibitory portion of the surround
(Fig. 5, icon 2). With this configuration, the small plaid
region forms a locally prominent figure against the background of the
large optimal grating. If response is modulated based on the context of
the stimulus, the response of the cell should be decreased because the
CRF lies in a portion of the image that corresponds to the background.
Therefore, as the contrast (and perceptual saliency) of the orthogonal
grating increases, the figure-ground model predicts no change in
response or even an additional decrease. As the results in Figure
5B demonstrate, this did not occur. On the contrary,
disinhibition was observed for all three cells. For comparison,
population data from full-field masking conditions are included
(open triangles). These data suggest a simple local
interaction process without a requirement for context-based images or
higher-order feedback. The disinhibition model provides a parsimonious
account of the data.
Facilitation or disinhibition?
The individual cells we studied exhibit varying degrees of
disinhibition. Responses do not increase significantly beyond the optimal level for any of the examples shown. To see whether this trend
is consistent across the population, we re-normalized the data to the
responses obtained with the optimal gratings restricted to the CRF as
shown in Figure 6A.
Optimal responses were recorded in separate trials immediately after
the main test trials, and some cells were lost before the complete set
of control measurements were collected, so results for 13 cells are
shown. In this plot, 1 represents the response to the
optimal stimulus presented to the center alone. Therefore, at the
lowest contrasts of the orthogonal grating, one sees the distribution
of surround suppression across the population. For low contrasts, there
is no change in the suppression. At the higher contrasts, the responses
increase, as illustrated in previous figures. As shown in the
population mean and median (Fig. 6B), there is a
slight increase above 1 for the highest contrast level.

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Figure 6.
A summary is given of normalized responses from
cells for which appropriate control data are available. The responses
are all normalized to the response of the optimal grating restricted to
the CRF. A, The responses to 1% orthogonal grating
contrast indicate the distribution of surround suppression for the
population tested. The mean and median of this distribution are
essentially unchanged until ~16% contrast, and then they increase
monotonically. At the highest contrast (80%), there is an overall
tendency for slight facilitation above the responses to the optimal
center stimulus. B, The population mean (open
squares) and median (filled triangles)
values are shown here.
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|
These results indicate that, although many cells are fully
disinhibited, they do not generally respond much stronger than the
level obtained with optimal center stimulation alone. The data shown in
Figure 6B provide a clear demonstration of the
disinhibition effect over the population, with only minor facilitation.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The main finding of this study is that surround suppression may be
partially or completely reversed by appropriate stimuli. We found in
previous work that nearly all influence from outside the CRF is
inhibitory in nature (Walker et al., 1999
, 2000
). In the current study,
we determined that this inhibition may be offset by a stimulus that, by
itself, has no effect on the response of the cell. A grating patch that
is orthogonal to the preferred orientation of the cell, and is
positioned outside the CRF, does not influence the response of the
cell. However, when placed over a grating patch of the preferred
orientation to form an orthogonal grid, the combination reduces the
inhibitory effect, partially or completely. This process of
disinhibition may be accounted for by local neural connections, as
described below.
Figure-ground segregation
Considerable interest has been raised by a possible perceptual
application of CRF and surround organization. Specifically, it has been
proposed that the segregation of a figure from a background is assisted
by the suppressive region surrounding the CRF (Nothdurft, 1991
;
Lamme, 1995
; Kastner et al., 1997
). This is an appealing idea, but it
is also difficult to interpret. The standard figure-ground pattern
consists of a central patch of a given pattern that is surrounded by a
different pattern, as in the case of the icon of Figure
1A5. However, a looser definition
could include adjoining patterns that are different, such as those
illustrated by the icons in Figure
1B5. Another potential difficulty
is that figure-ground processing could occur in one or more of
several cortical areas. Therefore, ruling out figure-ground
segregation in V1, as reported recently (Rossi et al., 2001
), does not
eliminate the possibility that this function occurs in other cortical
areas. Obviously, because it is a perceptual reality, figure-ground
segregation must occur in one or more cortical areas.
The interactions we report in the current study may be accounted for by
local processes that are not necessarily connected to perceptual
events. For example, we find the same degree of suppression and
disinhibition for surround-CRF interaction for a small patch of
gratings as for a complete pattern that covers the entire circumference
of the CRF. In the classical pattern, a figure is surrounded entirely
by the surround. Unless, as noted above, one includes any adjacent
pattern differences as a figure-ground pattern, our results may be
accounted for on the basis of local events that are not necessarily
connected to a perceptual process.
A neural mechanism for disinhibition
A neural circuit that could form the basis of a disinhibition
process is illustrated in Figure 7. This
model assumes a spatiotemporal convolution, followed by a contrast
normalization process and a static output nonlinearity, as depicted
within the rectangle of Figure 7 (Heeger, 1992
; Carandini et
al., 1997
). We assume that this process is characteristic of all
striate cortex RFs in the entire visual field. We also assume that, for
certain cells, there is a subset of neurons with similar RF properties
that serves as the basis of surround suppression for a given cell. The
example in Figure 7 arbitrarily uses four cells in the surround pool. They are all spatially overlapping but displaced from the central RF,
and all four cells prefer orientations near vertical, as does the cell
in the center (DeAngelis et al., 1992
). The cells in the surround could
inhibit the center cell directly through monosynaptic inhibition or
they could act through interneurons.

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Figure 7.
A schematic illustration is presented of a model
that provides the underlying neural circuitry of local contrast
normalization and surround suppression. Each RF is assumed to exhibit
normalization, with broadband rectification underlying its response
properties. This includes the cell designated as the
Center, as well as those cells contributing to the
Surround. The pool of cells contributing to surround
suppression are spatially displaced from the center RF but are tightly
clustered and have similar orientation preferences to that of the
center cell.
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|
We assume a contrast normalization process for the CRF. Contrast
normalization exhibits two prominent properties. First, it is divisive.
Second, the signal that serves as the denominator in the division is
proportional to the total contrast energy of the visual stimulus within
a specified region of space (Heeger, 1992
; Carandini et al., 1999
). It
has been suggested that the surround may act as an extension of the
contrast normalization mechanism in the CRF (Cavanaugh et al., 1998
).
Consistent with this idea is the observation that, with increasing
contrast of iso-oriented surround gratings, the contrast response
function of the center shifts to the right on log coordinates
(Cavanaugh et al., 1998
). This is the expected result of a divisive
operation or contrast normalization (Heeger, 1992
; Cavanaugh et al.,
1998
; Carandini et al., 1999
). In addition, iso-oriented surround
suppression increases proportionately with contrast (Cavanaugh et al.,
1998
). This is also consistent with a normalization process. However, other aspects of surround suppression are not consistent with contrast
normalization. For example, surround suppression is generally tuned to
orientations and spatial frequencies that match the preferred values of
the CRF (Nelson and Frost, 1978
; DeAngelis et al., 1994
; Li and Li,
1994
), whereas contrast normalization in the CRF is presumed to pool
over the entire range of orientations (Heeger, 1992
). In addition, our
current results suggest that the cells comprising the surround of the
CRF are themselves subject to local broadband contrast normalization.
When an orthogonal grating is added to the surround, the total contrast
energy in the stimulus increases. However, contrary to the prediction
of a general contrast normalization mechanism, our results show that
most cells respond more vigorously to this added contrast energy.
Considered together, these findings suggest that the center plus
surround should not be considered as a pool for a combined contrast normalization.
The nature of influence from the surround
A fundamental question that must be addressed concerns the nature
of the influence from the region beyond the CRF. Several reports
suggest that surround stimulation can increase the response of the cell
(Maffei and Fiorentini, 1976
; Sillito et al., 1995
; Levitt and Lund,
1997
; Polat et al., 1998
). This means that activation of the surround
excites a cell to respond above the level obtained with optimal
stimulation of the center. This has been reported to occur even for
stimulation in the CRF with a grating that is orthogonal to the
preferred orientation (Sillito et al., 1995
).
In general, we observed very limited facilitation from the surround
(Walker et al., 1999
, 2000
). We find that the surround modulates the
excitation generated by stimulation of the CRF. In extensive tests, we
found that apparent facilitation by stimulation of the surround is
nearly always caused by faulty centering of the grating such that part
of the stimulus is delivered to the CRF (Walker et al., 1999
,
2000
).
It is important to distinguish the results of disinhibition that we
report here from those of facilitation. In the case of disinhibition,
increased response strength results from a withdrawal of inhibition.
Another factor that could play a role in this process is tonic
inhibition from cells whose RFs are in the surround. If a grating that
is orthogonal to the optimal orientation silences the surround cells,
then the source of tonic inhibition is removed, and this would increase
the response to CRF stimulation.
An advantage of the plaid surround used in our current study is that
the contrast energy of the optimal surround grating remains constant
throughout the tests. The addition of the orthogonal grating simply
adds contrast energy in another part of the spectrum. There is still
sufficient contrast energy in the stimulus to activate surround
suppression. The resultant disinhibition shows that responses of cells
providing surround suppression are masked by the orthogonal grating.
Finally, it should be mentioned that the choice of a response reference
frame can influence the interpretation of a given set of findings. In
some figure-ground studies, the response to a full-field homogeneous
texture stimulus is taken as the baseline (Lamme, 1995
; Zipser et al.,
1996
). This means that the baseline response consists of excitation
from the CRF and suppression from the surround. The overall result is
that the baseline response is lower than that of the CRF alone. If the
cell is then tested with texture restricted to the CRF, with or without
texture in the surround, this could be interpreted as facilitation. An
additional interpretation is that the facilitated response is
attributable to a restricted stimulus, i.e., a figure, standing out as
perceptually relevant against a background. If an alternative baseline
is used consisting of stimulation of the CRF alone, then manipulations of the surround would not influence the response of the cell, except to
reduce it.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 30, 2001; revised March 21, 2002; accepted March 25, 2002.
This work was supported by National Eye Institute Research and CORE
Grants EY01175 and EY3176.
Correspondence should be addressed to Ralph D. Freeman, 360 Minor
Hall, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720-2020. E-mail: freeman{at}neurovision.berkeley.edu.
G. A. Walker's present address: Guidant Corporation, 1525 O'Brien Drive, Menlo Park, CA 94025.
I. Ohzawa's present address: Department of Biophysical Engineering,
Osaka University, 1-3 Machikaneyama, Toyonaka-shi, Osaka 560-8531, Japan.
 |
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