Frontiers in Neural Circuits (Feb 2016)

Stimulus contrast and retinogeniculate signal processing

  • Daniel Llewellyn Rathbun,
  • Daniel Llewellyn Rathbun,
  • Henry Joseph Alitto,
  • Henry Joseph Alitto,
  • David K. Warland,
  • David K. Warland,
  • W. Martin eUsrey,
  • W. Martin eUsrey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fncir.2016.00008
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Neuronal signals conveying luminance contrast play a key role in nearly all aspects of perception, including depth perception, texture discrimination, and motion perception. Although much is known about the retinal mechanisms responsible for encoding contrast information, relatively little is known about the relationship between stimulus contrast and the processing of neuronal signals between visual structures. Here we describe simultaneous recordings from monosynaptically connected retinal ganglion cells and lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) neurons in the cat to determine how stimulus contrast affects the communication of visual signals between the two structures. Our results indicate that 1) LGN neurons typically reach their half-maximal response at lower contrasts than their individual retinal inputs, and 2) LGN neurons exhibit greater contrast-dependent phase advance (CDPA) than their retinal inputs. Further analyses suggests that increased sensitivity relies on spatial convergence of multiple retinal inputs, while increased CDPA is achieved, in part, on temporal summation of arriving signals.

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