Short Time-Scale Sensory Coding in S1 during Discrimination of Whisker Vibrotactile Sequences.

Rodent whisker input consists of dense microvibration sequences that are often temporally integrated for perceptual discrimination. Whether primary somatosensory cortex (S1) participates in temporal integration is unknown. We trained rats to discriminate whisker impulse sequences that varied in sing...

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Main Authors: Leah M McGuire, Gregory Telian, Keven J Laboy-Juárez, Toshio Miyashita, Daniel J Lee, Katherine A Smith, Daniel E Feldman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-08-01
Series:PLoS Biology
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5004814?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-c9e0ab8fbf0e44169416e0fbc68c3b2c2021-07-02T06:09:59ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Biology1544-91731545-78852016-08-01148e100254910.1371/journal.pbio.1002549Short Time-Scale Sensory Coding in S1 during Discrimination of Whisker Vibrotactile Sequences.Leah M McGuireGregory TelianKeven J Laboy-JuárezToshio MiyashitaDaniel J LeeKatherine A SmithDaniel E FeldmanRodent whisker input consists of dense microvibration sequences that are often temporally integrated for perceptual discrimination. Whether primary somatosensory cortex (S1) participates in temporal integration is unknown. We trained rats to discriminate whisker impulse sequences that varied in single-impulse kinematics (5-20-ms time scale) and mean speed (150-ms time scale). Rats appeared to use the integrated feature, mean speed, to guide discrimination in this task, consistent with similar prior studies. Despite this, 52% of S1 units, including 73% of units in L4 and L2/3, encoded sequences at fast time scales (≤20 ms, mostly 5-10 ms), accurately reflecting single impulse kinematics. 17% of units, mostly in L5, showed weaker impulse responses and a slow firing rate increase during sequences. However, these units did not effectively integrate whisker impulses, but instead combined weak impulse responses with a distinct, slow signal correlated to behavioral choice. A neural decoder could identify sequences from fast unit spike trains and behavioral choice from slow units. Thus, S1 encoded fast time scale whisker input without substantial temporal integration across whisker impulses.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5004814?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Leah M McGuire
Gregory Telian
Keven J Laboy-Juárez
Toshio Miyashita
Daniel J Lee
Katherine A Smith
Daniel E Feldman
spellingShingle Leah M McGuire
Gregory Telian
Keven J Laboy-Juárez
Toshio Miyashita
Daniel J Lee
Katherine A Smith
Daniel E Feldman
Short Time-Scale Sensory Coding in S1 during Discrimination of Whisker Vibrotactile Sequences.
PLoS Biology
author_facet Leah M McGuire
Gregory Telian
Keven J Laboy-Juárez
Toshio Miyashita
Daniel J Lee
Katherine A Smith
Daniel E Feldman
author_sort Leah M McGuire
title Short Time-Scale Sensory Coding in S1 during Discrimination of Whisker Vibrotactile Sequences.
title_short Short Time-Scale Sensory Coding in S1 during Discrimination of Whisker Vibrotactile Sequences.
title_full Short Time-Scale Sensory Coding in S1 during Discrimination of Whisker Vibrotactile Sequences.
title_fullStr Short Time-Scale Sensory Coding in S1 during Discrimination of Whisker Vibrotactile Sequences.
title_full_unstemmed Short Time-Scale Sensory Coding in S1 during Discrimination of Whisker Vibrotactile Sequences.
title_sort short time-scale sensory coding in s1 during discrimination of whisker vibrotactile sequences.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Biology
issn 1544-9173
1545-7885
publishDate 2016-08-01
description Rodent whisker input consists of dense microvibration sequences that are often temporally integrated for perceptual discrimination. Whether primary somatosensory cortex (S1) participates in temporal integration is unknown. We trained rats to discriminate whisker impulse sequences that varied in single-impulse kinematics (5-20-ms time scale) and mean speed (150-ms time scale). Rats appeared to use the integrated feature, mean speed, to guide discrimination in this task, consistent with similar prior studies. Despite this, 52% of S1 units, including 73% of units in L4 and L2/3, encoded sequences at fast time scales (≤20 ms, mostly 5-10 ms), accurately reflecting single impulse kinematics. 17% of units, mostly in L5, showed weaker impulse responses and a slow firing rate increase during sequences. However, these units did not effectively integrate whisker impulses, but instead combined weak impulse responses with a distinct, slow signal correlated to behavioral choice. A neural decoder could identify sequences from fast unit spike trains and behavioral choice from slow units. Thus, S1 encoded fast time scale whisker input without substantial temporal integration across whisker impulses.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5004814?pdf=render
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