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Sensory input to cortex encoded on low-dimensional periphery-correlated subspaces.


ABSTRACT: As information about the world is conveyed from the sensory periphery to central neural circuits, it mixes with complex ongoing cortical activity. How do neural populations keep track of sensory signals, separating them from noisy ongoing activity? Here, we show that sensory signals are encoded more reliably in certain low-dimensional subspaces. These coding subspaces are defined by correlations between neural activity in the primary sensory cortex and upstream sensory brain regions; the most correlated dimensions were best for decoding. We analytically show that these correlation-based coding subspaces improve, reaching optimal limits (without an ideal observer), as noise correlations between cortex and upstream regions are reduced. We show that this principle generalizes across diverse sensory stimuli in the olfactory system and the visual system of awake mice. Our results demonstrate an algorithm the cortex may use to multiplex different functions, processing sensory input in low-dimensional subspaces separate from other ongoing functions.

SUBMITTER: Barreiro AK 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10798852 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Sensory input to cortex encoded on low-dimensional periphery-correlated subspaces.

Barreiro Andrea K AK   Fontenele Antonio J AJ   Ly Cheng C   Raju Prashant C PC   Gautam Shree Hari SH   Shew Woodrow L WL  

PNAS nexus 20240110 1


As information about the world is conveyed from the sensory periphery to central neural circuits, it mixes with complex ongoing cortical activity. How do neural populations keep track of sensory signals, separating them from noisy ongoing activity? Here, we show that sensory signals are encoded more reliably in certain low-dimensional subspaces. These coding subspaces are defined by correlations between neural activity in the primary sensory cortex and upstream sensory brain regions; the most co  ...[more]

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