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Gain Modulation. Huei-Ju Chen Papers: Chance, Abbott, and Reyes(2002) E. Salinas & T. Sejnowski(2001) E. Salinas & L.G. Abbott (1997, 1996) Pouget & T. Sejnowski (2001). Outline. What is gain modulation? Gain modulation in the parietal cortex (coordinate transformations)
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Gain Modulation Huei-Ju Chen Papers: Chance, Abbott, and Reyes(2002) E. Salinas & T. Sejnowski(2001) E. Salinas & L.G. Abbott (1997, 1996) Pouget & T. Sejnowski (2001)
Outline • What is gain modulation? • Gain modulation in the parietal cortex (coordinate transformations) • Gain modulation in Neglect • Invariant visual responses from attentional gain fields • Gain modulation from background synaptic Input
Introduction • Gain modulation is a nonlinear way in which neurons combine information from two or more sources, which may be of sensory, motor, or cognitive origin. • One input affects the gain of the neuron to the other input without modifying the neuron’s receptive field properties. • Salinas and Sejnowski, 2001
Gain Modulation In Neurons Salinas & Sejnowski, 2001
Gain Fields • Response of one neuron • The downstream response R • e.g.
Gain Modulation in Cognition • Coordinate transformations • Modulatory quantity: gaze angle • Translation-invariant object recognition and size constancy • Modulatory quantity: attention • Motion processing
Gain Modulation In Coordinate Transformations:Modulator: Gaze Angle
A Model of Multiplicative Neural Responses in Parietal Cortex • Synapse weights for recurrent connections Salinas and Abbott, 1996
One Model of Neglect (A Coordinate Frame Syndrome) • Neglect is a neurologic syndrome characterized by a conspicuous inability to react or respond to stimuli presented in the hemispace contralateral to the lesion.
One Model of Neglect (A Coordinate Frame Syndrome) • Pouget & Sejnowski, 2001
One Model of Neglect (A Coordinate Frame Syndrome) • The unilateral lesion is modeled by deleting the two right maps.
Invariant Visual Response From Attentional Gain Field Salinas and Abbott, 1997
Simulation of Model Network for Images Translated Across Visual Field
Simulation: Images at Different Scales Salinas and Abbott, 1997
Gain Modulation From Background Synaptic Input • Chance, Abbott, and Reyes, 2002 • By introducing a barrage of excitatory and inhibitory synaptic conductance that mimics conditions encountered in vivo into pyramidal cells in rat cortex, the gain of a neuronal response to excitatory drive are shown to be modulated by varying the level of background synaptic input. Chance, Abbott, and Reyes, 2002
Summary • Gain modulation is a prominent feature of neuronal activity recorded in behaving animals, but the mechanism by which it occurs is still not clear. • Gain modulation is very close to multiplicative. However, its essential feature is nonlinearity. • Gain fields have been implicated in eye and reaching movements, spatial perception, attention, navigation, and object recognition.