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Functional structure of correlated cortical activity in human visual areas

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dc.contributor.advisor이상훈-
dc.contributor.author류중원-
dc.date.accessioned2017-07-14T00:59:09Z-
dc.date.available2017-07-14T00:59:09Z-
dc.date.issued2017-02-
dc.identifier.other000000142732-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/121541-
dc.description학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 뇌인지과학과, 2017. 2. 이상훈.-
dc.description.abstractThe cerebral cortex is a large-scale network, where processing units are intimately connected. In the sensory system, a sensory organ and downstream cortical regions communicate through hierarchical connections, and local sites within the regions communicate through horizontal connections. In such interconnected networks, neural activities at local sites are likely to influence one another in complex ways and thus are intricately correlated. Recognizing the functional importance of correlated population activity in sensory representation, the neural activities arising spontaneously without the external stimuli have been studied via diverse local or global measures in various time scales. Here, measuring functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) signals in human early visual cortex, we studied the structure of correlated population activity. Guided by previously known biases in anatomical connection patterns, we evaluated and compared the contributions of three relational factors to the correlated fMRI activities. Namely, all possible pairs of gray matter sites in visual areas were characterized (i) in terms of how far the receptive fields of two sites are from each other over retinotopic space, (ii) in terms of how far two sites are over cortical surface, and (iii) in terms of how similarly two sites are tuned to visual features, spatial frequency and orientation. We found that, although the three relational factors all have their own contributions in accounting for the structure of correlated fMRI activity, the tuning similarity factors overrode the distance factors. The predominance of tuning similarity was evident both within and between V1, V2, and V3, irrespective of the presence or degree of visual stimulation. We also found that the stimulus-tuned covariability systematically varied depending on the angular positions and the eccentricity in the visual field. Moreover, we found that the pairwise covariability of spontaneous fMRI activities fluctuated dynamically over time, and that this temporal dynamics was governed by both the distance factors and the tuning similarity factors. In general, our findings suggest that the spontaneous cortical activities in the human early visual areas can be understood as the interplays among local sites constituting a multilayered network, where different layers are governed by different distance or function factors. In specific, our study demonstrated that the layers governed by the stimulus tuning similarity are far more dominant than those governed by the distance factors.-
dc.description.tableofcontents1. INTRODUCTION 1
1.1. Correlated Population Activity in Visual Cortex 1
1.2. Connectivity Structures in Visual Cortex 2
2. CORRELATED FMRI ACTIVITY TUNED TO STIMULUS FEATURE 6
2.1. Definition for Retinotopic, Cortical Distance and Tuning Similarity 7
2.2. Stimulus-Tuned Covariability in V1, V2, and V3 During Resting State 15
2.3. Controls for Alternative Explanations 32
2.4. Combined Contribution of SF and OR Tuning Similarities to Resting-State Correlation 44
2.5. Invariance of Stimulus-Tuned Covariability to Changes in Sensory Drive 47
2.6. Invariance of Stimulus-Tuned Covariability to Changes in Spatial Scale 52
2.7. Spatial Structure of Stimulus-Tuned Covariability 59
2.8. Stimulus-Tuned Dynamics of Resting-State fMRI Activity 62
3. DISCUSSION 66
3.1. Predominance of Tuning Similarity over Retinotopic and Cortical Distance 68
3.2. Concurrent Evaluation of Spatial Proximity and Tuning Similarity 70
3.3. Implications for Optimal Population Decoding 74
3.4. Origin of Mesoscopic Stimulus-Tuned Covariability 78
4. MATERIALS AND METHODS 82
4.1. Subjects 82
4.2. Display 83
4.3. MRI Scanning 84
4.4. Measurements During Resting State 84
4.5. Preprocessing 85
4.6. Procedures for Retinotopic Mapping 86
4.7. Fixation Task 89
4.8. Procedures for Mapping Stimulus Tuning 89
4.9. Correlated Variability in Resting- and Driven-State Scans 93
4.10. Voxel Selection 95
4.11. Cortical Distance 97
4.12. Part Correlation 98
4.13. Procedure and Data Analysis of Auxiliary Experiment 100
4.14. Statistical Test 105
Bibliography 106
국문초록 114
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dc.formatapplication/pdf-
dc.format.extent6827224 bytes-
dc.format.mediumapplication/pdf-
dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisher서울대학교 대학원-
dc.subjectspontaneous activity-
dc.subjectcovariance structure-
dc.subjectresting state-
dc.subjectfunctional connectivity-
dc.subjectstimulus tuning-
dc.subjectvisual cortex-
dc.subjectcortical travelling wave-
dc.subjectfunctional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)-
dc.subjectcortical distance-
dc.subject.ddc612-
dc.titleFunctional structure of correlated cortical activity in human visual areas-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.description.degreeDoctor-
dc.citation.pages116-
dc.contributor.affiliation자연과학대학 뇌인지과학과-
dc.date.awarded2017-02-
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