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The gamma rhythm has been implicated in neuronal communication, but causal evidence remains indirect. We measured spike output of local neuronal networks and emulated their synaptic input through optogenetics. Opsins provide currents through somato-dendritic membranes, similar to synapses, yet under experimental control with high temporal precision. We expressed Channelrhodopsin-2 in excitatory neurons of cat visual cortex and recorded neuronal responses to light with different temporal characteristics. Sine waves of different frequencies entrained neuronal responses with a reliability that peaked for input frequencies in the gamma band. Crucially, we also presented white-noise sequences, because their temporal unpredictability enables analysis of causality. Neuronal spike output was caused specifically by the input’s gamma component. This gamma-specific transfer function is likely an emergent property of in-vivo networks with feedback inhibition. The method described here could reveal the transfer function between the input to any one and the output of any other neuronal group.
Synchronization has been implicated in neuronal communication, but causal evidence remains indirect. We used optogenetics to generate depolarizing currents in pyramidal neurons of cat visual cortex, emulating excitatory synaptic inputs under precise temporal control, while measuring spike output. Cortex transformed constant excitation into strong gamma-band synchronization, revealing the well-known cortical resonance. Increasing excitation with ramps increased the strength and frequency of synchronization. Slow, symmetric excitation profiles revealed hysteresis of power and frequency. Crucially, white-noise input sequences enabled causal analysis of network transmission, establishing that cortical resonance selectively transmits coherent input components. Models composed of recurrently coupled excitatory and inhibitory units uncovered a crucial role of feedback inhibition and suggest that hysteresis can arise through spike-frequency adaptation. The presented approach provides a powerful means to investigate the resonance properties of local circuits and probe how these properties transform input and shape transmission.
When a visual stimulus is repeated, average neuronal responses typically decrease, yet they might maintain or even increase their impact through increased synchronization. Previous work has found that many repetitions of a grating lead to increasing gamma-band synchronization. Here we show in awake macaque area V1 that both, repetition-related reductions in firing rate and increases in gamma are specific to the repeated stimulus. These effects showed some persistence on the timescale of minutes. Further, gamma increases were specific to the presented stimulus location. Importantly, repetition effects on gamma and on firing rates generalized to natural images. These findings suggest that gamma-band synchronization subserves the adaptive processing of repeated stimulus encounters, both for generating efficient stimulus responses and possibly for memory formation.