Visual stimulation of a region outside the receptive field
of single cells in visual cortex often results in the modulation
of their responses. The modulatory effects are thought to be
mediated through lateral connections within visual cortex. Research
on lateral interactions commonly shows suppression. There has
been no systematic study of the optimal conditions for
facilitation. Here we have studied the nature of the modulation
using a new type of compound stimulus: contrast reversal of
pattern stimuli made of three discrete grating patches. The
middle patch, optimally fitted to the receptive field in
orientation, size, and spatial as well as temporal frequencies,
was flanked by two similar patches presented well outside the
receptive field. We found that (1) both facilitation and
suppression occurred often in the same cells, when orientations
of the target and flankers matched the receptive-field's
optimal orientation; (2) facilitation with collinear flankers
occurred most frequently at target contrasts just above the
cell's firing threshold and suppression prevailed at high
contrasts; (3) facilitative or suppressive modulation was obtained
with target-flankers separation of up to 12 deg or more; (4)
collinear facilitation was lost when flankers' orientation
was rotated by 90 deg, while keeping all other parameters the
same; and (5) neither the modulation mode nor the proportion
of modulated cells was related to the cell types (simple
vs. complex cells) and cells' laminar locations.
Here we have provided physiological evidence for
contrast-dependent, collinear facilitation probably
underlying perceptual grouping in humans.