(related to Fig 4) Effects of PV cell activation on the lick latency of go and no-go stimuli across the different time windows in the easy discrimination task.
<p>Response latency for time to first lick in laser off (0 mW/mm<sup>2</sup>) versus laser on (0.04–0.43 mW/mm<sup>2</sup>). Circle, median; line, 95% CI of bootstrapping. Asterisks indicate significant deviation (<i>p</i> < 0.05) from no laser stimulatio...
Wedi'i Gadw mewn:
| Prif Awdur: | Lilia Kukovska (22683586) (author) |
|---|---|
| Awduron Eraill: | Katharina A. Wilmes (22683589) (author), Natsumi Y. Homma (22683592) (author), Claudia Clopath (324706) (author), Jasper Poort (22683595) (author) |
| Cyhoeddwyd: |
2025
|
| Pynciau: | |
| Tagiau: |
Ychwanegu Tag
Dim Tagiau, Byddwch y cyntaf i dagio'r cofnod hwn!
|
Eitemau Tebyg
-
Changes in neural selectivity caused by PV cell activation reflect behavioral performance in easy but not difficult discriminations.
gan: Lilia Kukovska (22683586)
Cyhoeddwyd: (2025) -
(related to Fig 5) Effects of PV cell activation on the activity of Pyr cells across the different time windows and task difficulty conditions.
gan: Lilia Kukovska (22683586)
Cyhoeddwyd: (2025) -
(related to Fig 2) Changes in behavioral readouts as a function of laser power in the easy discrimination task.
gan: Lilia Kukovska (22683586)
Cyhoeddwyd: (2025) -
PV cell activation selectively affects different decision-making components.
gan: Lilia Kukovska (22683586)
Cyhoeddwyd: (2025) -
Stimulating PV cells at nonsilencing levels does not improve performance of difficult visual discriminations.
gan: Lilia Kukovska (22683586)
Cyhoeddwyd: (2025)