Repository of Research and Investigative Information

Repository of Research and Investigative Information

Baqiyatallah University of Medical Sciences

Mice Can Use Second-Order, Contrast-Modulated Stimuli to Guide Visual Perception

(2016) Mice Can Use Second-Order, Contrast-Modulated Stimuli to Guide Visual Perception. Journal of Neuroscience. pp. 4457-4469. ISSN 0270-6474

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Abstract

Visual processing along the primate ventral stream takes place in a hierarchy of areas, characterized by an increase in both complexity of neuronal preferences and invariance to changes of low-level stimulus attributes. A basic type of invariance is form-cue invariance, where neurons have similar preferences in response to first-order stimuli, defined by changes in luminance, and global features of second-order stimuli, defined by changes in texture or contrast. Whether in mice, a now popular model system for early visual processing, visual perception can be guided by second-order stimuli is currently unknown. Here, we probed mouse visual perception and neural responses in areas V1 and LM using various types of second-order, contrast-modulated gratings with static noise carriers. These gratings differ in their spatial frequency composition and thus in their ability to invoke first-order mechanisms exploiting local luminance features. We show that mice can transfer learning of a coarse orientation discrimination task involving first-order, luminance-modulated gratings to the contrast-modulated gratings, albeit with markedly reduced discrimination performance. Consistent with these behavioral results, we demonstrate that neurons in area V1 and LM are less responsive and less selective to contrast-modulated than to luminance-modulated gratings, but respond with broadly similar preferred orientations. We conclude that mice can, at least in a rudimentary form, use second-order stimuli to guide visual perception.

Item Type: Article
Keywords: V1 LM orientation discrimination classical conditioning cue-invariance orientation tuning receptive-fields functional specialization orientation selectivity surround suppression neuronal responses shape-recognition striate cortex macaque v1 area invariant Neurosciences & Neurology
Divisions:
Page Range: pp. 4457-4469
Journal or Publication Title: Journal of Neuroscience
Journal Index: ISI
Volume: 36
Number: 16
Identification Number: https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.4595-15.2016
ISSN: 0270-6474
Depositing User: مهندس مهدی شریفی
URI: http://eprints.bmsu.ac.ir/id/eprint/5031

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