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Orientation hypercolumns of the visual cortex: Ring model

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Abstract

A hypercolumn of the visual cortex is a functional unit formed of neighboring columns whose neurons respond to a stimulus of particular orientation. The function of the hypercolumn is to amplify the orientation tuning of visually evoked responses. According to the conventional simple model of a hypercolumn, neuronal populations with different orientation preferences are distributed on a ring. Every population is described by a firing rate (FR) model. To determine the limitations of the FR-ring model, it was compared with a more detailed ring model, which takes into account the distribution of neurons of each population according to their voltage values. In the case of leaky integrate-and-fire neurons, every neuronal population is described by the Fokker-Planck equation (FPE). The mapping of parameters was obtained. The simulations revealed differences in the behavior of the two models. The FPE-based model reacts faster to a change in stimulus orientation. The FPE ring model gives a steady-state solution in the form of waves of activity traveling on the ring, whereas the FR ring model presents amplitude instability for the same parameter set. The FPE ring model reproduces the characteristic effects of the FR ring model: virtual rotation and symmetry breaking.

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Original Russian Text © E.Yu. Smirnova, A.V. Chizhov, 2011, published in Biofizika, 2011, Vol. 56, No. 3, pp. 527–533.

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Smirnova, E.Y., Chizhov, A.V. Orientation hypercolumns of the visual cortex: Ring model. BIOPHYSICS 56, 496–501 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1134/S0006350911030250

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S0006350911030250

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