Neuronal responses to face-like stimuli in the monkey pulvinar
Nguyen MN, Hon E, Matsumoto J, Tran AH, Ono T, Nishijo H
Nguyen-2013
Nguyen MN, Hori E, Matsumoto J, Tran AH, Ono T, Nishijo H (2013) Neuronal responses to face-like stimuli in the monkey pulvinar. Eur J Neurosci. 37:1:35-51. doi: 10.1111/ejn.12020.
ABSTRACT
The pulvinar nuclei appear to function as the subcortical visual pathway that bypasses the striate cortex, rapidly processing
coarse facial information. We investigated responses from monkey pulvinar neurons during a delayed non-matching-to-sample
task, in which monkeys were required to discriminate five categories of visual stimuli [photos of faces with different gaze directions,
line drawings of faces, face-like patterns (three dark blobs on a bright oval), eye-like patterns and simple geometric patterns].
Of 401 neurons recorded, 165 neurons responded differentially to the visual stimuli. These visual responses were
suppressed by scrambling the images. Although these neurons exhibited a broad response latency distribution, face-like patterns
elicited responses with the shortest latencies (approximately 50 ms). Multidimensional scaling analysis indicated that the pulvinar
neurons could specifically encode face-like patterns during the first 50-ms period after stimulus onset and classify the stimuli into
one of the five different categories during the next 50-ms period. The amount of stimulus information conveyed by the pulvinar
neurons and the number of stimulus-differentiating neurons were consistently higher during the second 50-ms period than during
the first 50-ms period. These results suggest that responsiveness to face-like patterns during the first 50-ms period might be
attributed to ascending inputs from the superior colliculus or the retina, while responsiveness to the five different stimulus categories
during the second 50-ms period might be mediated by descending inputs from cortical regions. These findings provide neurophysiological
evidence for pulvinar involvement in social cognition and, specifically, rapid coarse facial information processing.
