Early in life, visual experience influences the refinement of the preferential response for specific stimulus features exhibited by neurons in the primary visual cortex. A striking example of this influence is the reduction in cortical direction selectivity observed in cats reared under high-frequency stroboscopic illumination. Although various mechanisms have been proposed to explain the maturation of individual properties of neuronal responses, a unified account of the joint development of the multiple response features of cortical neurons has remained elusive. In this study, we show that Hebbian synaptic plasticity accounts for the simultaneous refinement of orientation and direction selectivity under both normal and stroboscopic rearing, if one takes into account the spatiotemporal input to the retina during oculomotor activity. In a computational model of the LGN and V1, eye movements are sufficient to establish the patterns of thalamocortical activity required for a Hebbian refinement of both direction-and orientation-selective responses during exposure to natural stimuli. Furthermore, we show that consideration of fixational eye movements explains the simultaneous loss of direction selectivity and preservation of orientation selectivity observed as a consequence of stroboscopic rearing. These results further support a role for oculomotor activity in the refinement of the response properties of V1 neurons.

A theory of the influence of eye movements on the refinement of direction selectivity in the cat's primary visual cortex

Casile, Antonino
;
2009-01-01

Abstract

Early in life, visual experience influences the refinement of the preferential response for specific stimulus features exhibited by neurons in the primary visual cortex. A striking example of this influence is the reduction in cortical direction selectivity observed in cats reared under high-frequency stroboscopic illumination. Although various mechanisms have been proposed to explain the maturation of individual properties of neuronal responses, a unified account of the joint development of the multiple response features of cortical neurons has remained elusive. In this study, we show that Hebbian synaptic plasticity accounts for the simultaneous refinement of orientation and direction selectivity under both normal and stroboscopic rearing, if one takes into account the spatiotemporal input to the retina during oculomotor activity. In a computational model of the LGN and V1, eye movements are sufficient to establish the patterns of thalamocortical activity required for a Hebbian refinement of both direction-and orientation-selective responses during exposure to natural stimuli. Furthermore, we show that consideration of fixational eye movements explains the simultaneous loss of direction selectivity and preservation of orientation selectivity observed as a consequence of stroboscopic rearing. These results further support a role for oculomotor activity in the refinement of the response properties of V1 neurons.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11570/3251507
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