Congruent and Opposite Neurons as Partners in Multisensory Integration and Segregation

ORAL

Abstract

Experiments revealed that where visual and vestibular cues are integrated to infer heading direction in the brain, there are two types of neurons with roughly the same number. Respectively, congruent and opposite cells respond similarly and oppositely to visual and vestibular cues. Congruent neurons are known to be responsible for cue integration, but the computational role of opposite neurons remains largely unknown. We propose that opposite neurons may serve to encode the disparity information between cues necessary for multisensory segregation. We build a computational model composed of two reciprocally coupled modules, each consisting of groups of congruent and opposite neurons. Our model reproduces the characteristics of congruent and opposite neurons, and demonstrates that in each module, congruent and opposite neurons can jointly achieve optimal multisensory information integration and segregation. This study sheds light on our understanding of how the brain implements optimal multisensory integration and segregation concurrently in a distributed manner.

Authors

  • Wen-Hao Zhang

    Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Carnegie Mellon University

  • K. Y. Michael Wong

    Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong Univ of Sci \& Tech, Hong Kong Univ of Sci & Tech

  • He Wang

    Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

  • Si Wu

    Beijing Normal University