Global Motion Processing by Populations of Direction-Selective Retinal Ganglion Cells.

dc.contributor.author

Cafaro, Jon

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Zylberberg, Joel

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Field, Greg D

dc.date.accessioned

2021-04-01T14:29:50Z

dc.date.available

2021-04-01T14:29:50Z

dc.date.issued

2020-07

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2021-04-01T14:29:50Z

dc.description.abstract

Simple stimuli have been critical to understanding neural population codes in sensory systems. Yet it remains necessary to determine the extent to which this understanding generalizes to more complex conditions. To examine this problem, we measured how populations of direction-selective ganglion cells (DSGCs) from the retinas of male and female mice respond to a global motion stimulus with its direction and speed changing dynamically. We then examined the encoding and decoding of motion direction in both individual and populations of DSGCs. Individual cells integrated global motion over ∼200 ms, and responses were tuned to direction. However, responses were sparse and broadly tuned, which severely limited decoding performance from small DSGC populations. In contrast, larger populations compensated for response sparsity, enabling decoding with high temporal precision (<100 ms). At these timescales, correlated spiking was minimal and had little impact on decoding performance, unlike results obtained using simpler local motion stimuli decoded over longer timescales. We use these data to define different DSGC population decoding regimes that use or mitigate correlated spiking to achieve high-spatial versus high-temporal resolution.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT ON-OFF direction-selective ganglion cells (ooDSGCs) in the mammalian retina are typically thought to signal local motion to the brain. However, several recent studies suggest they may signal global motion. Here we analyze the fidelity of encoding and decoding global motion in a natural scene across large populations of ooDSGCs. We show that large populations of DSGCs are capable of signaling rapid changes in global motion.

dc.identifier

JNEUROSCI.0564-20.2020

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0270-6474

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1529-2401

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22491

dc.language

eng

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Society for Neuroscience

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The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience

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10.1523/jneurosci.0564-20.2020

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Retinal Ganglion Cells

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Animals

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Mice, Inbred C57BL

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Mice, Inbred CBA

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Mice

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Photic Stimulation

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Orientation

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Motion Perception

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Female

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Male

dc.title

Global Motion Processing by Populations of Direction-Selective Retinal Ganglion Cells.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Field, Greg D|0000-0001-5942-2679

pubs.begin-page

5807

pubs.end-page

5819

pubs.issue

30

pubs.organisational-group

School of Medicine

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Neurobiology

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Duke Institute for Brain Sciences

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Duke

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Basic Science Departments

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University Institutes and Centers

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

40

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