Phase-of-Firing Coding of Natural Visual Stimuli in Primary Visual
Cortex
M. A. Montemurro, M. J. Rasch, Y. Murayam, N. K. Logothetis, and
S. Panzeri
Abstract:
We investigated the hypothesis that neurons encode rich naturalistic stimuli in
terms of their spike times relative to the phase of ongoing network
fluctuations rather than only in terms of their spike count. We recorded
local field potentials (LFPs) and multiunit spikes from the primary visual
cortex of anaesthetized macaques while binocularly presenting a color movie.
We found that both the spike counts and the low-frequency LFP phase were
reliably modulated by the movie and thus conveyed information about it.
Moreover, movie periods eliciting higher firing rates also elicited a higher
reliability of LFP phase across trials. To establish whether the LFP phase at
which spikes were emitted conveyed visual information that could not be
extracted by spike rates alone,wecompared the Shannon information about the
movie carried by spike counts to that carried by the phase of firing. We
found that at low LFP frequencies, the phase of firing conveyed 54 %
additional information beyond that conveyed by spike counts. The extra
information available in the phase of firing was crucial for the
disambiguation between stimuli eliciting high spike rates of similar
magnitude. Thus, phase coding may allow primary cortical neurons to represent
several effective stimuli in an easily decodable format.
Reference: M. A. Montemurro, M. J. Rasch, Y. Murayam, N. K. Logothetis,
and S. Panzeri.
Phase-of-firing coding of natural visual stimuli in primary visual cortex.
Current Biology, 18:375-380, 2008.