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Pathway-selective optogenetics reveals the functional anatomy of top–down attentional modulation in the macaque visual cortex

Janina Hüer, Pankhuri Saxena, Stefan Treue

2024Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Spatial attention represents a powerful top-down influence on sensory responses in primate visual cortical areas. The frontal eye field (FEF) has emerged as a key candidate area for the source of this modulation. However, it is unclear whether the FEF exerts its effects via its direct axonal projections to visual areas or indirectly through other brain areas and whether the FEF affects both the enhancement of attended and the suppression of unattended sensory responses. We used pathway-selective optogenetics in rhesus macaques performing a spatial attention task to inhibit the direct input from the FEF to area MT, an area along the dorsal visual pathway specialized for the processing of visual motion information. Our results show that the optogenetic inhibition of the FEF input specifically reduces attentional modulation in MT by about a third without affecting the neurons' sensory response component. We find that the direct FEF-to-MT pathway contributes to both the enhanced processing of target stimuli and the suppression of distractors. The FEF, thus, selectively modulates firing rates in visual area MT, and it does so via its direct axonal projections.

Topics & Concepts

OptogeneticsNeuroscienceMacaqueFrontal eye fieldsSensory systemVisual cortexVisual systemPhotic StimulationVisual processingBiologyVisual perceptionPsychologyEye movementSaccadePerceptionNeural dynamics and brain functionPhotoreceptor and optogenetics researchNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research
Pathway-selective optogenetics reveals the functional anatomy of top–down attentional modulation in the macaque visual cortex | Litcius