Testing the role of spontaneous activity in visuospatial perception with patterned optogenetics

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 27-02-2025
Journal PLoS ONE
Article number e0318863
Volume | Issue number 20 | 2
Number of pages 28
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences (SILS) - Amsterdam Neuroscience
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences (SILS)
Abstract
A major debate in the field of consciousness pertains to whether neuronal activity or rather the causal structure of neural circuits underlie the generation of conscious experience. The former position is held by theoretical accounts of consciousness based on the predictive processing framework (such as neurorepresentationalism and active inference), while the latter is posited by the integrated information theory. This protocol describes an experiment, part of a larger adversarial collaboration, that was designed to address this question through a combination of behavioral tests in mice, functional imaging, patterned optogenetics and electrophysiology. The experiment will directly test if optogenetic inactivation of a portion of the visual cortex not responding to behaviorally relevant stimuli will affect the perception of the spatial distribution of these stimuli, even when the neurons being inactivated display no or very low spiking activity, so low that it does not induce a significant effect on other cortical areas. The results of the experiment will be compared against theoretical predictions, and will provide a major contribution towards understanding what the neuronal substrate of consciousness is.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0318863
Downloads
Permalink to this page
Back