RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Stabilized Supralinear Network Model of Responses to Surround Stimuli in Primary Visual Cortex JF eneuro JO eNeuro FD Society for Neuroscience SP ENEURO.0459-24.2025 DO 10.1523/ENEURO.0459-24.2025 VO 12 IS 5 A1 Obeid, Dina A1 Miller, Kenneth D. YR 2025 UL http://www.eneuro.org/content/12/5/ENEURO.0459-24.2025.abstract AB In the mammalian primary visual cortex (V1), there are complex interactions between responses to stimuli present in the cell’s classical receptive field (CRF) or “center” and in the surrounding region or “surround.” The circuit mechanisms underlying these behaviors are likely to represent more general cortical mechanisms for integrating information. Here, we develop a circuit model that accounts for three important features of surround suppression (suppression of response to a center stimulus by addition of a surround stimulus): (1) The surround stimulus suppresses the inhibitory and excitatory currents that the cell receives; (2) The strongest suppression arises when the surround orientation matches that of the center stimulus, even when the center stimulus orientation differs from the cell’s preferred orientation; and (3) A surround stimulus of a given orientation most strongly suppresses that orientation’s component of the response to a plaid center stimulus (“feature-specific suppression”). We show that a stabilized supralinear network (SSN) with biologically plausible connectivity and synaptic efficacies that depend on cortical distance and orientation difference between units can consistently reproduce phenomena (1) and (3), and, qualitatively, phenomenon (2). We explain the mechanism behind each result. We argue that phenomena (2) and (3) are independent: the model with some aspects of connectivity removed still produces phenomenon (3) but not (2). The model reproduces the rapid time scale of activity decay observed in mouse V1 when thalamic input to V1 is silenced. Finally, we show that these results hold both in networks with rate-based and conductance-based spiking units.