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Dive into the research topics where David C. Somers is active.

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Featured researches published by David C. Somers.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Visual Topography of Human Intraparietal Sulcus

Jascha D. Swisher; Mark A. Halko; Lotfi B. Merabet; Stephanie A. McMains; David C. Somers

Human parietal cortex is implicated in a wide variety of sensory and cognitive functions, yet its precise organization remains unclear. Visual field maps provide a potential structural basis for descriptions of functional organization. Here, we detail the topography of a series of five maps of the contralateral visual hemifield within human posterior parietal cortex. These maps are located along the medial bank of the intraparietal sulcus (IPS) and are revealed by direct visual stimulation during functional magnetic resonance imaging, allowing these parietal regions to be routinely and reliably identified simultaneously with occipital visual areas. Two of these maps (IPS3 and IPS4) are novel, whereas two others (IPS1 and IPS2) have previously been revealed only by higher-order cognitive tasks. Area V7, a previously identified visual map, is observed to lie within posterior IPS and to share a foveal representation with IPS1. These parietal maps are reliably observed across scan sessions; however, their precise topography varies between individuals. The multimodal organization of posterior IPS mirrors this variability in visual topography, with complementary tactile activations found immediately adjacent to the visual maps both medially and laterally. These visual maps may provide a practical framework in which to characterize the functional organization of human IPS.


Biological Cybernetics | 1993

Rapid synchronization through fast threshold modulation

David C. Somers; Nancy Kopell

Synchronization properties of locally coupled neural oscillators were investigated analytically and by computer simulation. When coupled in a manner that mimics excitatory chemical synapses, oscillators having more than one time scale (relaxation oscillators) are shown to approach synchrony using mechanisms very different from that of oscillators with a more sinusoidal waveform. The relaxation oscillators make critical use of fast modulations of their thresholds, leading to a rate of synchronization relatively independent of coupling strength within some basin of attraction; this rate is faster for oscillators that have conductance-based features than for neural caricatures such as the FitzHugh-Nagumo equations that lack such features. Computer simulations of one-dimensional arrays show that oscillators in the relaxation regime synchronize much more rapidly than oscillators with the same equations whose parameters have been modulated to yield a more sinusoidal waveform. We present a heuristic explanation of this effect based on properties of the coupling mechanisms that can affect the way the synchronization scales with array length. These results suggest that the emergent synchronization behavior of oscillating neural networks can be dramatically influenced by the intrinsic properties of the network components. Possible implications for perceptual feature binding and attention are discussed.


Neural Networks | 1991

Synchronized oscillations during cooperative feature linking in a cortical model of visual perception

Stephen Grossberg; David C. Somers

Abstract A neural network model of synchronized oscillator activity in visual cortex is presented in order to account for recent neurophysiological findings that such synchronization may reflect global properties of the stimulus. In these recent experiments, it was reported that synchronization of oscillatory firing responses to moving bar stimuli occurred not only for nearby neurons, but also occurred between neurons separated by several cortical columns (several mm of cortex) when these neurons shared some receptive field preferences specific to the stimuli. These results were obtained not only for single bar stimuli but also across two disconnected, but colinear, bars moving in the same direction. Our model and computer simulations obtain these synchrony results across both single and double bar stimuli. For the double bar case, synchronous oscillations are induced in the region between the bars, but no oscillations are induced in the regions beyond the stimuli. These results were achieved with cellular units that exhibit limit cycle oscillations for a robust range of input values, but which approach an equilibrium state when undriven. Single and double bar synchronization of these oscillators was achieved by different, but formally related, models of preattentive visual boundary segmentation and attentive visual object recognition, as well as nearest-neighbor and randomly coupled models. In preattentive visual segmentation, synchronous oscillations may reflect the binding of local feature detectors into a globally coherent grouping. In object recognition, synchronous oscillations may occur during an attentive resonant state that triggers new learning. These modelling results support earlier theoretical predictions of synchronous visual cortical oscillations and demonstrate the robustness of the mechanisms capable of generating synchrony.


Nature Reviews Neuroscience | 2005

What blindness can tell us about seeing again: merging neuroplasticity and neuroprostheses

Lotfi B. Merabet; Joseph F. Rizzo; Amir Amedi; David C. Somers; Alvaro Pascual-Leone

Significant progress has been made in the development of visual neuroprostheses to restore vision in blind individuals. Appropriate delivery of electrical stimulation to intact visual structures can evoke patterned sensations of light in those who have been blind for many years. However, success in developing functional visual prostheses requires an understanding of how to communicate effectively with the visually deprived brain in order to merge what is perceived visually with what is generated electrically.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

Processing Efficiency of Divided Spatial Attention Mechanisms in Human Visual Cortex

Stephanie A. McMains; David C. Somers

Many visual tasks require deployment of attention to multiple objects or locations. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging and behavioral experiments to investigate the relative processing efficiency of two putative attentional mechanisms for performing such tasks: the “zoom lens” and “multiple spotlights.” Two key questions were investigated: (1) does splitting the spotlight into multiple foci incur an overhead cost that diminishes the efficacy of attention compared with the zoom lens, and (2) does splitting the spotlight provide a benefit relative to the zoom lens by conserving attention resources that otherwise would be directed to task irrelevant stimuli? For both mechanisms, attending to multiple object locations decreased processing efficiency at a single location, resulting in both decreased behavioral performance and decreased blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal attentional modulation. When the two mechanisms attended to multiple objects across the same spatial extent, the multiple spotlight mechanism, which ignores intervening stimuli, yielded better performance and higher BOLD signal. When the two mechanisms processed the same number of stimuli, splitting the spotlight neither impaired performance nor diminished BOLD signal in occipital cortex. The surprising efficiency of the multiple spotlight mechanism supports the emerging view that spatial attention is easily deployed in a diverse range of spatial configurations.


international symposium on physical design | 1995

Waves and synchrony in networks of oscillators of relaxation and non-relaxation type

David C. Somers; Nancy Kopell

Abstract Arrays of relaxation oscillators behave differently in the presence of a non-uniformity of natural frequencies and/or coupling inputs than do arrays of phase oscillators coupled through phase differences. Phase oscillators compensate for non-uniformities by creating phase differences among the oscillators; relaxation oscillators coupled via “fast threshold modulation” (FTM) can respond by changing wave forms while leaving the fast jumps synchronous. For arrays of relaxation oscillators including chains, this allows synchrony to be a solution, even though the oscillators have different amounts of inputs from other oscillators; for phase-difference coupled oscillators in a chain, the generic solution is a travelling wave. Relaxation oscillators coupled through FTM also allow the encoding of patterns of oscillators into domains in which oscillators are in synchrony, with different domains in antiphase.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

Hemispheric Asymmetry in Visuotopic Posterior Parietal Cortex Emerges with Visual Short-Term Memory Load

Summer Sheremata; Katherine Bettencourt; David C. Somers

Visual short-term memory (VSTM) briefly maintains a limited sampling from the visual world. Activity in the intraparietal sulcus (IPS) tightly correlates with the number of items stored in VSTM. This activity may occur in or near to multiple distinct visuotopically mapped cortical areas that have been identified in IPS. To understand the topographic and spatial properties of VSTM, we investigated VSTM activity in visuotopic IPS regions using functional magnetic resonance imaging. VSTM drove areas IPS0–2, but largely spared IPS3–4. Under visual stimulation, these areas in both hemispheres code the contralateral visual hemifield. In contrast to the hemispheric symmetry observed with visual stimulation, an asymmetry emerged during VSTM with increasing memory load. The left hemisphere exhibited load-dependent activity only for contralateral memory items; right hemisphere activity reflected VSTM load regardless of visual-field location. Our findings demonstrate that VSTM induces a switch in spatial representation in right hemisphere IPS from contralateral to full-field coding. The load dependence of right hemisphere effects argues that memory-dependent and/or attention-dependent processes drive this change in spatial processing. This offers a novel means for investigating spatial-processing impairments in hemispatial neglect.


Journal of Mathematical Biology | 1995

Anti-phase solutions in relaxation oscillators coupled through excitatory interactions

Nancy Kopell; David C. Somers

Relaxation oscillators interacting via models of excitatory chemical synapses with sharp thresholds can have stable anti-phase as well as in-phase solutions. The mechanism for anti-phase demonstrated in this paper relies on the fact that, in a large class of neural models, excitatory input slows down the receiving oscillator over a portion of its trajectory. We analyze the effect of this “virtual delay” in an abstract model, and then show that the hypotheses of that model hold for widely used descriptions of bursting neurons.


Journal of Vision | 2009

Effects of target enhancement and distractor suppression on multiple object tracking capacity.

Katherine Bettencourt; David C. Somers

Mounting evidence suggests that visual attention may be simultaneously deployed to multiple distinct object locations, but the constraints upon this multi-object attentional system are still debated. Results from multiple object tracking (MOT) experiments have been interpreted as revealing a fixed attentional capacity limit of 4 objects, while other evidence has suggested that attentional capacity may be more fluid. Here, we investigated the influence of target stimulus factors, such as speed and size, and of distractor filtering factors, such as number of distractors and screen density, on MOT performance. Each factor had significant effects on capacity, producing values that ranged from above 6 objects down to one object, depending on the task demands. Although our results support the view that crowding effects modulate the effective capacity of attention, we also find evidence that central processes related to distractor suppression and target enhancement modulate capacity.


Cerebral Cortex | 2014

Auditory Spatial Attention Representations in the Human Cerebral Cortex

Lingqiang Kong; Samantha W. Michalka; Maya L. Rosen; Summer Sheremata; Jascha D. Swisher; Barbara G. Shinn-Cunningham; David C. Somers

Auditory spatial attention serves important functions in auditory source separation and selection. Although auditory spatial attention mechanisms have been generally investigated, the neural substrates encoding spatial information acted on by attention have not been identified in the human neocortex. We performed functional magnetic resonance imaging experiments to identify cortical regions that support auditory spatial attention and to test 2 hypotheses regarding the coding of auditory spatial attention: 1) auditory spatial attention might recruit the visuospatial maps of the intraparietal sulcus (IPS) to create multimodal spatial attention maps; 2) auditory spatial information might be encoded without explicit cortical maps. We mapped visuotopic IPS regions in individual subjects and measured auditory spatial attention effects within these regions of interest. Contrary to the multimodal map hypothesis, we observed that auditory spatial attentional modulations spared the visuotopic maps of IPS; the parietal regions activated by auditory attention lacked map structure. However, multivoxel pattern analysis revealed that the superior temporal gyrus and the supramarginal gyrus contained significant information about the direction of spatial attention. These findings support the hypothesis that auditory spatial information is coded without a cortical map representation. Our findings suggest that audiospatial and visuospatial attention utilize distinctly different spatial coding schemes.

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Samantha W. Michalka

Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering

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Maya L. Rosen

University of Washington

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Mark A. Halko

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Summer Sheremata

Florida Atlantic University

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