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Characteristics of inhibition in receptive fields of the cat visual cortex

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Abstract

Unit responses of neurons of zone 17 in the cat striate cortex to stripes of different widths were studied. Changes in the number of spikes during different time intervals (cuts) from the beginning of the response were analyzed in relation to stimulus area. Comparison of the results with those obtained by the study of receptive fields of the lateral geniculate body showed a significant difference in the dynamics of inhibition between cortical and geniculate receptive fields. Similar results were obtained when cortical unit responses to simultaneous and consecutive appearance of two stripes in the receptive field, one in the excitatory zone and the other at the inhibitory periphery, were studied. Evidence of the longer duration of cortical inhibition also was obtained by the same technique. When both stripes were placed in the excitatory center of the field another feature of cortical inhibition was revealed: its dependence on the order of stimulus application. If the order of stimulus application coincided with the optimal direction of movement of the stripe for the given field, the unit response to the next stimulus was strongly facilitated by the action of the stimulus applied previously. Application of stimuli in the opposite order invoked inhibition. The sensitivity of inhibition to the order of stimulus application was observed in the center of the field; it diminished toward the periphery, where application of the stimuli in any order evokes inhibition of the response.

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Medical Academy, Sofia, Bulgaria, I. P. Pavlov Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 9, No. 4, pp. 339–346, July–August, 1977.

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Mitova, L.L. Characteristics of inhibition in receptive fields of the cat visual cortex. Neurophysiology 9, 261–268 (1977). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01063688

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