for information, an interesting dataset recorded in V1:
Matthew A Smith and Adam Kohn. Spatial and temporal scales of neuronal correlation in primary visual cortex. Journal of Neuroscience, 28(48):12591–12603, 2008. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2929-08.2008
(found in Fitting summary statistics of neural data with a differentiable spiking network simulator - Guillaume Bellec, Shuqi Wang, Alireza Modirshanechi, Johanni Brea, Wulfram Gerstner https://arxiv.org/pdf/2106.10064.pdf)
from Bellec's supplementary:
V1-dataset The dataset we used was collected by Smith and Kohn [49] and is publicly available at: http://crcns.org/data-sets/vc/pvc-11. In summary, macaque monkeys were anesthetized with Utah arrays placed in the primary visual cortex (V1). In our analysis, we considered population spiking activity of monkey-I in response to a gray-scale natural movie. The movie is about a monkey wading through water. It lasts for 30 seconds (with sampling rate 25Hz) and was played repeatedly for 120 times. Similarly as in [21], we used the last 26 seconds of the movies and recordings. Each frame of the movie has 320 × 320 pixels and we downsampled them to 27 × 27 pixels. We used the recording from the 69 neurons with time bins 40ms and considered that there cannot be more than one spike per bin (5% of the time bins had more than one spike).
for information, an interesting dataset recorded in V1:
Matthew A Smith and Adam Kohn. Spatial and temporal scales of neuronal correlation in primary visual cortex. Journal of Neuroscience, 28(48):12591–12603, 2008. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2929-08.2008
(found in Fitting summary statistics of neural data with a differentiable spiking network simulator - Guillaume Bellec, Shuqi Wang, Alireza Modirshanechi, Johanni Brea, Wulfram Gerstner https://arxiv.org/pdf/2106.10064.pdf)
from Bellec's supplementary:
V1-dataset The dataset we used was collected by Smith and Kohn [49] and is publicly available at: http://crcns.org/data-sets/vc/pvc-11. In summary, macaque monkeys were anesthetized with Utah arrays placed in the primary visual cortex (V1). In our analysis, we considered population spiking activity of monkey-I in response to a gray-scale natural movie. The movie is about a monkey wading through water. It lasts for 30 seconds (with sampling rate 25Hz) and was played repeatedly for 120 times. Similarly as in [21], we used the last 26 seconds of the movies and recordings. Each frame of the movie has 320 × 320 pixels and we downsampled them to 27 × 27 pixels. We used the recording from the 69 neurons with time bins 40ms and considered that there cannot be more than one spike per bin (5% of the time bins had more than one spike).