Cortical Representation of Information about Visual Attributes: One Network or Many? a Introduction A.1 Cortical Representation of Visual Information

Information about various visual attributes, such as orientation or color, is represented in the primate striate cortex (VI) before reaching extrastriate cortices. Previous studies, using single-or multi-unit recordings, have reached conflicting conclusions regarding the question of whether these different attributes are represented by separate populations of neurons in VI. We addressed this question with imaging of intrinsic optical signals from macaque VI. The animals viewed either full field (uniform) color stimuli or drifting black and white gratings of various orientations. We used the Support Vector Machine (SVM) algorithm to determine the relative amount of information about a given attribute at each cortical location. We found that each single-trial image contained significant amounts of information about color or orientation. The information about either attribute was distributed unevenly across VI. Color information was concentrated in small regions of high information density, surrounded by large regions of low information density, while orientation information showed the opposite pattern. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that color and orientation are represented in different compartments in VI.

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