| Literature DB >> 30392796 |
Giacomo Benvenuti1, Yuzhi Chen1, Charu Ramakrishnan2, Karl Deisseroth3, Wilson S Geisler4, Eyal Seidemann5.
Abstract
Humans have remarkable scale-invariant visual capabilities. For example, our orientation discrimination sensitivity is largely constant over more than two orders of magnitude of variations in stimulus spatial frequency (SF). Orientation-selective V1 neurons are likely to contribute to orientation discrimination. However, because at any V1 location neurons have a limited range of receptive field (RF) sizes, we predict that at low SFs V1 neurons will carry little orientation information. If this were the case, what could account for the high behavioral sensitivity at low SFs? Using optical imaging in behaving macaques, we show that, as predicted, V1 orientation-tuned responses drop rapidly with decreasing SF. However, we reveal a surprising coarse-scale signal that corresponds to the projection of the luminance layout of low-SF stimuli to V1's retinotopic map. This homeomorphic and distributed representation, which carries high-quality orientation information, is likely to contribute to our striking scale-invariant visual capabilities.Entities:
Keywords: genetically encoded cacium indicators; multi-scale representation; neural population code; optical imaging; orientation discrimination; orientation map; primary visual cortex; retinotopic map; visual perception; voltage sensitive dye
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30392796 PMCID: PMC6345167 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2018.10.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuron ISSN: 0896-6273 Impact factor: 17.173