Touch-evoked traveling waves establish a translaminar spacetime code.

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作者:Gonzales Daniel L, Khan Hammad F, Keri Hayagreev V S, Yadav Saumitra, Steward Christopher, Muller Lyle E, Pluta Scott R, Jayant Krishna
Linking sensory-evoked traveling waves to underlying circuit patterns is critical to understanding the neural basis of sensory perception. To form this link, we performed simultaneous electrophysiology and two-photon calcium imaging through transparent NeuroGrids and mapped touch-evoked traveling waves and underlying microcircuit dynamics. In awake mice, both passive and active whisker touch elicited traveling waves within and across barrels, with a fast early component followed by a late wave that lasted hundreds of milliseconds poststimulus. Notably, late waves were modulated by perceived value and predicted behavioral choice in a two-whisker discrimination task. We found that the late wave feature was (i) modulated by motor feedback, (ii) differentially engaged a sparse ensemble reactivation pattern across layer 2/3, which a balanced-state network model reconciled via feedback-induced inhibitory stabilization, and (iii) aligned to regenerative layer 5 apical dendritic Ca(2+) events. Our results reveal that translaminar spacetime patterns organized by cortical feedback support sparse touch-evoked traveling waves.

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