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Dive into the research topics where Marc Pananceau is active.

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Featured researches published by Marc Pananceau.


Frontiers in Neural Circuits | 2013

Animation of natural scene by virtual eye-movements evokes high precision and low noise in V1 neurons.

Pierre Baudot; Manuel Levy; Olivier Marre; Cyril Monier; Marc Pananceau; Yves Frégnac

Synaptic noise is thought to be a limiting factor for computational efficiency in the brain. In visual cortex (V1), ongoing activity is present in vivo, and spiking responses to simple stimuli are highly unreliable across trials. Stimulus statistics used to plot receptive fields, however, are quite different from those experienced during natural visuomotor exploration. We recorded V1 neurons intracellularly in the anaesthetized and paralyzed cat and compared their spiking and synaptic responses to full field natural images animated by simulated eye-movements to those evoked by simpler (grating) or higher dimensionality statistics (dense noise). In most cells, natural scene animation was the only condition where high temporal precision (in the 10–20 ms range) was maintained during sparse and reliable activity. At the subthreshold level, irregular but highly reproducible membrane potential dynamics were observed, even during long (several 100 ms) “spike-less” periods. We showed that both the spatial structure of natural scenes and the temporal dynamics of eye-movements increase the signal-to-noise ratio by a non-linear amplification of the signal combined with a reduction of the subthreshold contextual noise. These data support the view that the sparsening and the time precision of the neural code in V1 may depend primarily on three factors: (1) broadband input spectrum: the bandwidth must be rich enough for recruiting optimally the diversity of spatial and time constants during recurrent processing; (2) tight temporal interplay of excitation and inhibition: conductance measurements demonstrate that natural scene statistics narrow selectively the duration of the spiking opportunity window during which the balance between excitation and inhibition changes transiently and reversibly; (3) signal energy in the lower frequency band: a minimal level of power is needed below 10 Hz to reach consistently the spiking threshold, a situation rarely reached with visual dense noise.


Frontiers in Synaptic Neuroscience | 2010

A Re-Examination of Hebbian-Covariance Rules and Spike Timing-Dependent Plasticity in Cat Visual Cortex in vivo.

Yves Frégnac; Marc Pananceau; Alice René; Nazyed Huguet; Olivier Marre; Manuel Levy; Daniel E. Shulz

Spike timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) is considered as an ubiquitous rule for associative plasticity in cortical networks in vitro. However, limited supporting evidence for its functional role has been provided in vivo. In particular, there are very few studies demonstrating the co-occurrence of synaptic efficiency changes and alteration of sensory responses in adult cortex during Hebbian or STDP protocols. We addressed this issue by reviewing and comparing the functional effects of two types of cellular conditioning in cat visual cortex. The first one, referred to as the “covariance” protocol, obeys a generalized Hebbian framework, by imposing, for different stimuli, supervised positive and negative changes in covariance between postsynaptic and presynaptic activity rates. The second protocol, based on intracellular recordings, replicated in vivo variants of the theta-burst paradigm (TBS), proven successful in inducing long-term potentiation in vitro. Since it was shown to impose a precise correlation delay between the electrically activated thalamic input and the TBS-induced postsynaptic spike, this protocol can be seen as a probe of causal (“pre-before-post”) STDP. By choosing a thalamic region where the visual field representation was in retinotopic overlap with the intracellularly recorded cortical receptive field as the afferent site for supervised electrical stimulation, this protocol allowed to look for possible correlates between STDP and functional reorganization of the conditioned cortical receptive field. The rate-based “covariance protocol” induced significant and large amplitude changes in receptive field properties, in both kitten and adult V1 cortex. The TBS STDP-like protocol produced in the adult significant changes in the synaptic gain of the electrically activated thalamic pathway, but the statistical significance of the functional correlates was detectable mostly at the population level. Comparison of our observations with the literature leads us to re-examine the experimental status of spike timing-dependent potentiation in adult cortex. We propose the existence of a correlation-based threshold in vivo, limiting the expression of STDP-induced changes outside the critical period, and which accounts for the stability of synaptic weights during sensory cortical processing in the absence of attention or reward-gated supervision.


Archive | 2009

Multiscale Functional Imaging in V1 and Cortical Correlates of Apparent Motion

Yves Frégnac; Pierre Baudot; Frédéric Chavane; Jean Lorenceau; Olivier Marre; Cyril Monier; Marc Pananceau; Pedro V. Carelli; Gérard Sadoc

In vivo intracellular electrophysiology offers the unique possibility of listening to the “synaptic rumor” of the cortical network captured by the recording electrode in a single V1 cell. The analysis of synaptic echoes evoked during sensory processing is used to reconstruct the distribution of input sources in visual space and time. It allows us to infer, in the cortical space, the dynamics of the effective input network afferent to the recorded cell. We have applied this method to demonstrate the propagation of visually evoked activity through lateral (and possibly feedback) connectivity in the primary cortex of higher mammals. This approach, based on functional synaptic imaging, is compared here with a real-time functional network imaging technique, based on the use of voltage-sensitive fluorescent dyes. The former method gives access to microscopic convergence processes during synaptic integration in a single neuron, while the latter describes the macroscopic divergence process at the neuronal map level. The joint application of the two techniques, which address two different scales of integration, is used to elucidate the cortical origin of low-level (non-attentive) binding processes participating in the emergence of illusory motion percepts predicted by the psychological Gestalt theory.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2016

Synaptic Correlates of Low-Level Perception in V1.

Florian Gérard-Mercier; Pedro V. Carelli; Marc Pananceau; Xoana G. Troncoso; Yves Frégnac

The computational role of primary visual cortex (V1) in low-level perception remains largely debated. A dominant view assumes the prevalence of higher cortical areas and top-down processes in binding information across the visual field. Here, we investigated the role of long-distance intracortical connections in form and motion processing by measuring, with intracellular recordings, their synaptic impact on neurons in area 17 (V1) of the anesthetized cat. By systematically mapping synaptic responses to stimuli presented in the nonspiking surround of V1 receptive fields, we provide the first quantitative characterization of the lateral functional connectivity kernel of V1 neurons. Our results revealed at the population level two structural-functional biases in the synaptic integration and dynamic association properties of V1 neurons. First, subthreshold responses to oriented stimuli flashed in isolation in the nonspiking surround exhibited a geometric organization around the preferred orientation axis mirroring the psychophysical “association field” for collinear contour perception. Second, apparent motion stimuli, for which horizontal and feedforward synaptic inputs summed in-phase, evoked dominantly facilitatory nonlinear interactions, specifically during centripetal collinear activation along the preferred orientation axis, at saccadic-like speeds. This spatiotemporal integration property, which could constitute the neural correlate of a human perceptual bias in speed detection, suggests that local (orientation) and global (motion) information is already linked within V1. We propose the existence of a “dynamic association field” in V1 neurons, whose spatial extent and anisotropy are transiently updated and reshaped as a function of changes in the retinal flow statistics imposed during natural oculomotor exploration. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The computational role of primary visual cortex in low-level perception remains debated. The expression of this “pop-out” perception is often assumed to require attention-related processes, such as top-down feedback from higher cortical areas. Using intracellular techniques in the anesthetized cat and novel analysis methods, we reveal unexpected structural-functional biases in the synaptic integration and dynamic association properties of V1 neurons. These structural-functional biases provide a substrate, within V1, for contour detection and, more unexpectedly, global motion flow sensitivity at saccadic speed, even in the absence of attentional processes. We argue for the concept of a “dynamic association field” in V1 neurons, whose spatial extent and anisotropy changes with retinal flow statistics, and more generally for a renewed focus on intracortical computation.


Archive | 2016

The Visual Brain: Computing Through Multiscale Complexity

Yves Frégnac; Julien Fournier; Florian Gérard-Mercier; Cyril Monier; Marc Pananceau; Pedro V. Carelli; Xoana G. Troncoso

Information coding in sensory neurons is both digital, in terms of neuronal output spike timing and rate, and analog, produced by the irregular subthreshold changes in somatic and dendritic membrane potential resulting from synchronized volleys of synaptic inputs. Intracellular recordings give a unique access to a composite multiscale signal where the local microscopic integration process realized by a single neuron can be studied in the global mesoscopic context of the “unseen” units afferent to the recorded cell. This chapter shows how reverse engineering approaches can be used in the primary visual cortex of higher mammals to reveal the hidden complexity of visual processing and establish causal links between the functional dynamics of synaptic echoes in primary visual cortex and perceptual biases in low-level, non-attentive perception.


Experimental Brain Research | 2000

Functional plasticity in the interposito-thalamo-cortical pathway during conditioning

Marc Pananceau; Lucie Rispal-Padel


36th meeting of the Society for Neuroscience | 2006

Making “Complex” cells “Simple” by changing input statistics.

Julien Fournier; Cyril Monier; Marc Pananceau; Olivier Marre; R. Valerio; Irina Kopysova; Yves Frégnac


Bulletin De L Academie Nationale De Medecine | 2009

[Multiscale functional imaging: reconstructing network dynamics from the synaptic echoes recorded in a single visual cortex neuron]

Yves Frégnac; Pierre Baudot; Frédéric Chavane; Olivier Marre; Cyril Monier; Marc Pananceau; Gérard Sadoc


34th Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience | 2004

Time-coding, low noise Vm Attractors, and trial-by-trial spiking reproducibility during natural scene viewing in V1 cortex.

Pierre Baudot; Manuel Levy; Cyril Monier; Frédéric Chavane; Alice René; Nazied Huguet; Olivier Marre; Marc Pananceau; Irina Kopysova; Yves Frégnac


Archive | 2010

Stimulus-driven Coordination of Cortical Cell Assemblies and Propagation of Gestalt Belief in V1

Yves Frégnac; Pedro V. Carelli; Marc Pananceau; Cyril Monier

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Cyril Monier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Pierre Baudot

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Pedro V. Carelli

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Daniel E. Shulz

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Frédéric Chavane

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Manuel Levy

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Xoana G. Troncoso

Barrow Neurological Institute

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