We studied the effects of contextual modulation
in area V1 of anesthetized macaque monkeys. In 146 cells,
responses to a single line over the center of the receptive
field were compared with those to full texture patterns
in which the center line was surrounded by similar lines
at either the same orientation (uniform texture)
or the orthogonal orientation (orientation contrast).
On average, the responses to single lines were reduced
by 42% when texture was presented in the surround. Uniform
textures often produced stronger suppression (7% more,
on average) so that lines with orientation contrast on
average evoked larger responses than lines in uniform texture
fields. This difference is correlated with perceptual differences
between such stimuli, suggesting that physiological mechanisms
contributing to the saliency (“popout”) of
textural stimuli operate, at least to some degree, even
under anesthesia. Significant response modulation by the
texture surround was seen in 112 cells (77%). Fifty-three
cells (36%) responded differently to the two texture patterns;
response preferences for orientation contrast (35 cells;
24%) were seen more often than preferences for uniform
textures (18 cells; 12%). The remaining 59 cells (40%)
were similarly suppressed by both texture surrounds. Detailed
analysis of texture modulation revealed two major components
of surround effects: (1) fast nonspecific (“general”)
suppression that occurred at about the same latency as
excitatory responses and was found in all layers of striate
cortex; and (2) differential response modulation that began
about 60–70 ms after stimulus onset (about 15–20
ms after the onset of the excitatory response) and was
less homogeneously distributed over cortical layers.