Literature DB >> 24027295

Interacting linear and nonlinear characteristics produce population coding asymmetries between ON and OFF cells in the retina.

Zachary Nichols1, Sheila Nirenberg, Jonathan Victor.   

Abstract

The early visual system is a model for understanding the roles of cell populations in parallel processing. Cells in this system can be classified according to their responsiveness to different stimuli; a prominent example is the division between cells that respond to stimuli of opposite contrasts (ON vs OFF cells). These two cell classes display many asymmetries in their physiological characteristics (including temporal characteristics, spatial characteristics, and nonlinear characteristics) that, individually, are known to have important roles in population coding. Here we describe a novel distinction between the information that ON and OFF ganglion cell populations carry in mouse--that OFF cells are able to signal motion information about both light and dark objects, while ON cells have a selective deficit at signaling the motion of dark objects. We found that none of the previously reported asymmetries in physiological characteristics could account for this distinction. We therefore analyzed its basis via a recently developed linear-nonlinear-Poisson model that faithfully captures input/output relationships for a broad range of stimuli (Bomash et al., 2013). While the coding differences between ON and OFF cell populations could not be ascribed to the linear or nonlinear components of the model individually, they had a simple explanation in the way that these components interact. Sensory transformations in other systems can likewise be described by these models, and thus our findings suggest that similar interactions between component properties may help account for the roles of cell classes in population coding more generally.

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Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24027295      PMCID: PMC3771031          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1004-13.2013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  51 in total

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Authors:  Sheila Nirenberg; Illya Bomash; Jonathan W Pillow; Jonathan D Victor
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  14 in total

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5.  Functional Specialization of ON and OFF Cortical Pathways for Global-Slow and Local-Fast Vision.

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7.  Preferential Loss of Contrast Decrement Responses in Human Glaucoma.

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8.  Neuronal and perceptual differences in the temporal processing of darks and lights.

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9.  Predicting cortical dark/bright asymmetries from natural image statistics and early visual transforms.

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10.  A normalized contrast-encoding model exhibits bright/dark asymmetries similar to early visual neurons.

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