A Neural Circuit for Auditory Dominance over Visual Perception

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When conflicts occur during integration of visual and auditory information, one modality often dominates the other, but the underlying neural circuit mechanism remains unclear. Using auditory-visual discrimination tasks for head-fixed mice, we found that audition dominates vision in a process mediated by interaction between inputs from the primary visual (VC) and auditory (AC) cortices in the posterior parietal cortex (PTLp). Co-activation of the VC and AC suppresses VC-induced PTLp responses, leaving AC-induced responses. Furthermore, parvalbumin-positive (PV+) interneurons in the PTLp mainly receive AC inputs, and muscimol inactivation of the PTLp or optogenetic inhibition of its PV+ neurons abolishes auditory dominance in the resolution of cross-modal sensory conflicts without affecting either sensory perception. Conversely, optogenetic activation of PV+ neurons in the PTLp enhances the auditory dominance. Thus, our results demonstrate that AC input-specific feedforward inhibition of VC inputs in the PTLp is responsible for the auditory dominance during cross-modal integration.
Publisher
CELL PRESS
Issue Date
2017-02
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

MULTISENSORY INTEGRATION; SUPERIOR COLLICULUS; CORTICAL MICROSTIMULATION; SINGLE NEURON; CORTEX; INFORMATION; BEHAVIOR; HUMANS; AREAS; CONVERGENCE

Citation

NEURON, v.93, no.4, pp.940 - 940

ISSN
0896-6273
DOI
10.1016/j.neuron.2017.01.006
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/222740
Appears in Collection
BS-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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