Current Biology
Volume 32, Issue 23, 5 December 2022, Pages 5126-5137.e3
Journal home page for Current Biology

Article
Feature representation under crowding in macaque V1 and V4 neuronal populations

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2022.10.049Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Highlights

  • Crowding impairs encoding of target orientation in macaque V1 and V4 populations

  • Target discriminability was moderately impaired in V1 and more substantially in V4

  • The presence of distractors led to additive and multiplicative changes in tuning

  • Fixed readout strategies were limited in performance by non-affine tuning changes

Summary

Visual perception depends strongly on spatial context. A profound example is visual crowding, whereby the presence of nearby stimuli impairs the discriminability of object features. Despite extensive work on perceptual crowding and the spatial integrative properties of visual cortical neurons, the link between these two aspects of visual processing remains unclear. To understand better the neural basis of crowding, we recorded activity simultaneously from neuronal populations in V1 and V4 of fixating macaque monkeys. We assessed the information available from the measured responses about the orientation of a visual target both for targets presented in isolation and amid distractors. Both single neuron and population responses had less information about target orientation when distractors were present. Information loss was moderate in V1 and more substantial in V4. Information loss could be traced to systematic divisive and additive changes in neuronal tuning. Additive and multiplicative changes in tuning were more severe in V4; in addition, tuning exhibited other, non-affine transformations that were greater in V4, further restricting the ability of a fixed sensory readout strategy to extract accurate feature information across displays. Our results provide a direct test of crowding effects at different stages of the visual hierarchy. They reveal how crowded visual environments alter the spiking activity of cortical populations by which sensory stimuli are encoded and connect these changes to established mechanisms of neuronal spatial integration.

Keywords

visual cortex
crowding
spatial context
spatial integration
population decoding
perception

Data and code availability

Recordings reported in this study have been deposited in the CRCNS data sharing website: https://doi.org/10.6080/K0736P4H.

Any additional information required to reanalyze the data in this paper is available from the lead contact upon request.

Cited by (0)

4

Lead contact