Version 2.0

Data from: Theta but not gamma oscillations in area V4 depend on input from primary visual cortex

View Dataset
Kienitz, Ricardo;Cox, Michele A;Dougherty, Kacie;Saunders, Richard C;Schmiedt, Joscha T;Leopold, David A;Maier, Alexander;Schmid, Michael C

Description

Theta (3-9 Hz) and gamma (30-100 Hz) oscillations have been observed at different levels along the hierarchy of cortical areas and across a wide set of cognitive tasks. In the visual system, the emergence of both rhythms in primary visual cortex (V1) and mid-level cortical areas V4 have been linked with variations in perceptual reaction times [1–5]. Based on analytical methods to infer causality in neural activation patterns, it was concluded that gamma and theta oscillations might both reflect feedforward sensory processing from V1 to V4 [6–10]. Here we report on experiments in macaque monkeys in which we experimentally assessed the presence of both oscillations in the neural activity recorded from multi-electrode arrays in V1 and V4 before and after a permanent V1-lesion. With intact cortex theta and gamma oscillations could be reliably elicited in V1 and V4 when monkeys viewed a visual contour illusion and showed phase-to-amplitude coupling. Laminar analysis in V1 revealed that both theta and gamma oscillations occurred primarily in the supragranular layers, the cortical output compartment of V1. However, there was a clear dissociation between the two rhythms in V4 that became apparent when the major feedforward input to V4 was removed by lesioning V1: While V1 lesioning eliminated V4 theta, it had little effect on V4 gamma power except for delaying its emergence by >100 ms. These findings suggest that theta is more tightly associated with feedforward processing than gamma and pose limits on the proposed role of gamma as a feedforward mechanism. - Please always download the latest version of the files (via "Browse Repository")

Citations (1)

Mentions (0)

Metrics

Dataset Index

1.2

FAIR Score

38%

Citations

1

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

G-Node

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Cognitive Neuroscience

Field

Neuroscience

Domain

Life Sciences

Confidence Score

50%

Source

Scholar Data Model

Keywords

neurosciencevisual cortexprimary visual cortex (V1)V4oscillationsrhythmsthetagammalesionfeedforwardfeedback

Normalization Factors

FT

15.38

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00