More Than the Sum of Its Parts: Visual-Tactile Integration in the Behaving Rat

Adv Exp Med Biol. 2024:1437:37-58. doi: 10.1007/978-981-99-7611-9_3.

Abstract

We experience the world by constantly integrating cues from multiple modalities to form unified sensory percepts. Once familiar with multimodal properties of an object, we can recognize it regardless of the modality involved. In this chapter we will examine the case of a visual-tactile orientation categorization experiment in rats. We will explore the involvement of the cerebral cortex in recognizing objects through multiple sensory modalities. In the orientation categorization task, rats learned to examine and judge the orientation of a raised, black and white grating using touch, vision, or both. Their multisensory performance was better than the predictions of linear models for cue combination, indicating synergy between the two sensory channels. Neural recordings made from a candidate associative cortical area, the posterior parietal cortex (PPC), reflected the principal neuronal correlates of the behavioral results: PPC neurons encoded both graded information about the object and categorical information about the animal's decision. Intriguingly single neurons showed identical responses under each of the three modality conditions providing a substrate for a neural circuit in the cortex that is involved in modality-invariant processing of objects.

Keywords: Bayesian; Linearity; Multimodal integration; Mutual information; Neuronal coding; Posterior parietal cortex; Psychophysics; Rat; Touch; Vision.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cerebral Cortex*
  • Learning
  • Linear Models
  • Neurons
  • Rats
  • Touch*