Dendritic Compartmentalization Could Underlie Competition and Attentional Biasing of Simultaneous Visual Stimuli

Archie, Kevin A., Mel, Bartlett W.

Neural Information Processing Systems 

Neurons in area V4 have relatively large receptive fields (RFs), so multiple visualfeatures are simultaneously "seen" by these cells. Recordings from single V4 neurons suggest that simultaneously presented stimuli compete to set the output firing rate, and that attention acts to isolate individual features by biasing the competition in favor of the attended object. We propose that both stimulus competition and attentional biasing arisefrom the spatial segregation of afferent synapses onto different regions of the excitable dendritic tree of V4 neurons. The pattern of feedforward, stimulus-driveninputs follows from a Hebbian rule: excitatory afferents with similar RFs tend to group together on the dendritic tree, avoiding randomly located inhibitory inputs with similar RFs. The same principle guides the formation of inputs that mediate attentional modulation.

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