RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Unifying model for three forms of contextual modulation including feedback input from higher visual areas JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 2022.05.27.493753 DO 10.1101/2022.05.27.493753 A1 Serena Di Santo A1 Mario Dipoppa A1 Andreas Keller A1 Morgane Roth A1 Massimo Scanziani A1 Kenneth D. Miller YR 2022 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2022/05/28/2022.05.27.493753.abstract AB Neural responses to a localized visual stimulus are modulated by the content of its surrounding. This phenomenon manifests in several forms of contextual modulation, including three interrelated properties of the visual cortex: surround suppression, inverse response and surround facilitation. We devise a unified biologically realistic circuit model accounting for all these phenomena and show that i) surround suppression in L2/3 is only partially due to the recruitment of lateral inhibition; ii) long-range feedback projections are necessary for inverse response and iii) the width of the response profile in the feedback layer determines inverse size tuning. The model predicts the modulations induced by silencing somatostatin-expressing cells or higher visual areas or changing the stimulus contrast. These predictions are consistent with the experimental observations when available and can be tested in existing setups otherwise. We then show the robustness of the identified mechanisms in a model with three interneuron subclasses, built to fit the classical responses and able to predict inverse size-tuning curves.HighlightsOne model explains three different types of contextual modulation: (classical) surround suppression, (inverse) response to ‘holes’ in full field drifting gratings and cross orientation surround facilitation.Feedback, feedforward and lateral inhibitory inputs contribute to classical surround suppression in L2/3 of mouse V1 in different amounts.Observed responses to ‘holes’ in full field drifting gratings require long-range feedback projections.Surround modulation to the response to ‘holes’ in full field drifting gratings requires an increase in the characteristic length scale of the spatial pattern of activity in higher visual areas.The mechanisms uncovered by an analytically tractable model are also at work in a cell-type specific model that predicts response to a ‘hole’ stimulus.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.