Neuron
Volume 85, Issue 3, 4 February 2015, Pages 641-656
Journal home page for Neuron

Article
Neural Population Tuning Links Visual Cortical Anatomy to Human Visual Perception

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2014.12.041Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
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Highlights

  • Variability in cortical thickness and surface area has opposite functional impacts

  • Smaller human visual cortical thickness links to high neural and perceptual acuity

  • Larger human visual cortical surface area links to high neural and perceptual acuity

Summary

The anatomy of cerebral cortex is characterized by two genetically independent variables, cortical thickness and cortical surface area, that jointly determine cortical volume. It remains unclear how cortical anatomy might influence neural response properties and whether such influences would have behavioral consequences. Here, we report that thickness and surface area of human early visual cortices exert opposite influences on neural population tuning with behavioral consequences for perceptual acuity. We found that visual cortical thickness correlated negatively with the sharpness of neural population tuning and the accuracy of perceptual discrimination at different visual field positions. In contrast, visual cortical surface area correlated positively with neural population tuning sharpness and perceptual discrimination accuracy. Our findings reveal a central role for neural population tuning in linking visual cortical anatomy to visual perception and suggest that a perceptually advantageous visual cortex is a thinned one with an enlarged surface area.

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This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).