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      Sensory experience selectively reorganizes the late component of evoked responses.

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          Abstract

          In response to sensory stimulation, the cortex exhibits an early transient response followed by late and slower activation. Recent studies suggest that the early component represents features of the stimulus while the late component is associated with stimulus perception. Although very informative, these studies only focus on the amplitude of the evoked responses to study its relationship with sensory perception. In this work, we expand upon the study of how patterns of evoked and spontaneous activity are modified by experience at the mesoscale level using voltage and extracellular glutamate transient recordings over widespread regions of mouse dorsal neocortex. We find that repeated tactile or auditory stimulation selectively modifies the spatiotemporal patterns of cortical activity, mainly of the late evoked response in anesthetized mice injected with amphetamine and also in awake mice. This modification lasted up to 60 min and results in an increase in the amplitude of the late response after repeated stimulation and in an increase in the similarity between the spatiotemporal patterns of the late early evoked response. This similarity increase occurs only for the evoked responses of the sensory modality that received the repeated stimulation. Thus, this selective long-lasting spatiotemporal modification of the cortical activity patterns might provide evidence that evoked responses are a cortex-wide phenomenon. This work opens new questions about how perception-related cortical activity changes with sensory experience across the cortex.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Cereb Cortex
          Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991)
          Oxford University Press (OUP)
          1460-2199
          1047-3211
          Mar 10 2023
          : 33
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Canadian Centre for Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Lethbridge, Lethbridge, AB T1K 3M4, Canada.
          [2 ] Krembil Neuroscience Center, Toronto, ON M5T OS8, Canada.
          Article
          6608961
          10.1093/cercor/bhac231
          10016043
          35704850
          9f6b6207-a851-49d5-8c4f-19e1ee80cb49
          History

          sensory cortices,sensory experience,learning,cortical dynamics,spatiotemporal cortical patterns,sensory perception

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