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- Live5/17/2026, 4:35:28 PM
cec2b791d670Content snapshot
{ "field_tag": "excitatory-recurrence", "text": "What resolves this contention: Whether feature-specific local recurrent excitation is required for mouse V1 orientation selectivity. Ko 2011 reports a measurable like-to-like connectivity rule that biases recurrence by tuning similarity; the balanced-network theory argues random recurrent wiring is sufficient to produce strong selectivity without similarity-tuned wiring. / Neurons with the same preference for oriented stimuli connected at twice the rate of neurons with orthogonal orientation preferences. / We show that even though the total feedforward and total recurrent excitatory and inhibitory inputs all have a very weak orientation selectivity, strong selectivity emerges in the neuronal spike responses if the network operates in the balanced excitation/inhibition regime.", "source_refs": [ "paper:paper-31c9e0b4d258", "paper:paper-4ebfd9a19bd5", "wiki_page:computationalreviewrecurrence-05-horizontal", "paper:paper-31c9e0b4d258", "paper:paper-4ebfd9a19bd5", "wiki_page:computationalreviewrecurrence-05-horizontal", "paper:paper-31c9e0b4d258", "paper:paper-4ebfd9a19bd5", "wiki_page:computationalreviewrecurrence-05-horizontal" ], "importance": "0.7200", "tractability": "0.5500", "potential_impact": "0.7000", "composite_score": "0.2772", "elo_rating": "1500.00", "state": "open", "decay_rate": "0.01000", "resolution_evidence_refs": [] }