Callosal Influence on Visual Receptive Fields Has an Ocular, an Orientation-and Direction Bias

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Callosal Influence on Visual Receptive Fields Has an Ocular, an Orientation-and Direction Bias. / Conde-Ocazionez, Sergio A; Jungen, Christiane; Wunderle, Thomas; Eriksson, David; Neuenschwander, Sergio; Schmidt, Kerstin E.

In: Front Syst Neurosci, Vol. 12, 2018, p. 11.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Conde-Ocazionez, SA, Jungen, C, Wunderle, T, Eriksson, D, Neuenschwander, S & Schmidt, KE 2018, 'Callosal Influence on Visual Receptive Fields Has an Ocular, an Orientation-and Direction Bias', Front Syst Neurosci, vol. 12, pp. 11. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnsys.2018.00011

APA

Conde-Ocazionez, S. A., Jungen, C., Wunderle, T., Eriksson, D., Neuenschwander, S., & Schmidt, K. E. (2018). Callosal Influence on Visual Receptive Fields Has an Ocular, an Orientation-and Direction Bias. Front Syst Neurosci, 12, 11. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnsys.2018.00011

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{6b6f9abe1aa642eeac473f1171cfd9f0,
title = "Callosal Influence on Visual Receptive Fields Has an Ocular, an Orientation-and Direction Bias",
abstract = "One leading hypothesis on the nature of visual callosal connections (CC) is that they replicate features of intrahemispheric lateral connections. However, CC act also in the central part of the binocular visual field. In agreement, early experiments in cats indicated that they provide the ipsilateral eye part of binocular receptive fields (RFs) at the vertical midline (Berlucchi and Rizzolatti, 1968), and play a key role in stereoscopic function. But until today callosal inputs to receptive fields activated by one or both eyes were never compared simultaneously, because callosal function has been often studied by cutting or lesioning either corpus callosum or optic chiasm not allowing such a comparison. To investigate the functional contribution of CC in the intact cat visual system we recorded both monocular and binocular neuronal spiking responses and receptive fields in the 17/18 transition zone during reversible deactivation of the contralateral hemisphere. Unexpectedly from many of the previous reports, we observe no change in ocular dominance during CC deactivation. Throughout the transition zone, a majority of RFs shrink, but several also increase in size. RFs are significantly more affected for ipsi- as opposed to contralateral stimulation, but changes are also observed with binocular stimulation. Noteworthy, RF shrinkages are tiny and not correlated to the profound decreases of monocular and binocular firing rates. They depend more on orientation and direction preference than on eccentricity or ocular dominance of the receiving neuron's RF. Our findings confirm that in binocularly viewing mammals, binocular RFs near the midline are constructed via the direct geniculo-cortical pathway. They also support the idea that input from the two eyes complement each other through CC: Rather than linking parts of RFs separated by the vertical meridian, CC convey a modulatory influence, reflecting the feature selectivity of lateral circuits, with a strong cardinal bias.",
author = "Conde-Ocazionez, {Sergio A} and Christiane Jungen and Thomas Wunderle and David Eriksson and Sergio Neuenschwander and Schmidt, {Kerstin E}",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.3389/fnsys.2018.00011",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "11",
journal = "Front Syst Neurosci",
issn = "1662-5137",
publisher = "Frontiers Research Foundation",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Callosal Influence on Visual Receptive Fields Has an Ocular, an Orientation-and Direction Bias

AU - Conde-Ocazionez, Sergio A

AU - Jungen, Christiane

AU - Wunderle, Thomas

AU - Eriksson, David

AU - Neuenschwander, Sergio

AU - Schmidt, Kerstin E

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - One leading hypothesis on the nature of visual callosal connections (CC) is that they replicate features of intrahemispheric lateral connections. However, CC act also in the central part of the binocular visual field. In agreement, early experiments in cats indicated that they provide the ipsilateral eye part of binocular receptive fields (RFs) at the vertical midline (Berlucchi and Rizzolatti, 1968), and play a key role in stereoscopic function. But until today callosal inputs to receptive fields activated by one or both eyes were never compared simultaneously, because callosal function has been often studied by cutting or lesioning either corpus callosum or optic chiasm not allowing such a comparison. To investigate the functional contribution of CC in the intact cat visual system we recorded both monocular and binocular neuronal spiking responses and receptive fields in the 17/18 transition zone during reversible deactivation of the contralateral hemisphere. Unexpectedly from many of the previous reports, we observe no change in ocular dominance during CC deactivation. Throughout the transition zone, a majority of RFs shrink, but several also increase in size. RFs are significantly more affected for ipsi- as opposed to contralateral stimulation, but changes are also observed with binocular stimulation. Noteworthy, RF shrinkages are tiny and not correlated to the profound decreases of monocular and binocular firing rates. They depend more on orientation and direction preference than on eccentricity or ocular dominance of the receiving neuron's RF. Our findings confirm that in binocularly viewing mammals, binocular RFs near the midline are constructed via the direct geniculo-cortical pathway. They also support the idea that input from the two eyes complement each other through CC: Rather than linking parts of RFs separated by the vertical meridian, CC convey a modulatory influence, reflecting the feature selectivity of lateral circuits, with a strong cardinal bias.

AB - One leading hypothesis on the nature of visual callosal connections (CC) is that they replicate features of intrahemispheric lateral connections. However, CC act also in the central part of the binocular visual field. In agreement, early experiments in cats indicated that they provide the ipsilateral eye part of binocular receptive fields (RFs) at the vertical midline (Berlucchi and Rizzolatti, 1968), and play a key role in stereoscopic function. But until today callosal inputs to receptive fields activated by one or both eyes were never compared simultaneously, because callosal function has been often studied by cutting or lesioning either corpus callosum or optic chiasm not allowing such a comparison. To investigate the functional contribution of CC in the intact cat visual system we recorded both monocular and binocular neuronal spiking responses and receptive fields in the 17/18 transition zone during reversible deactivation of the contralateral hemisphere. Unexpectedly from many of the previous reports, we observe no change in ocular dominance during CC deactivation. Throughout the transition zone, a majority of RFs shrink, but several also increase in size. RFs are significantly more affected for ipsi- as opposed to contralateral stimulation, but changes are also observed with binocular stimulation. Noteworthy, RF shrinkages are tiny and not correlated to the profound decreases of monocular and binocular firing rates. They depend more on orientation and direction preference than on eccentricity or ocular dominance of the receiving neuron's RF. Our findings confirm that in binocularly viewing mammals, binocular RFs near the midline are constructed via the direct geniculo-cortical pathway. They also support the idea that input from the two eyes complement each other through CC: Rather than linking parts of RFs separated by the vertical meridian, CC convey a modulatory influence, reflecting the feature selectivity of lateral circuits, with a strong cardinal bias.

U2 - 10.3389/fnsys.2018.00011

DO - 10.3389/fnsys.2018.00011

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 29713267

VL - 12

SP - 11

JO - Front Syst Neurosci

JF - Front Syst Neurosci

SN - 1662-5137

ER -