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Cortical Balance Between ON and OFF Visual Responses Is Modulated by the Spatial Properties of the Visual Stimulus
- Source :
- Cerebral Cortex (New York, NY)
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- Oxford University Press, 2018.
-
Abstract
- The primary visual cortex of carnivores and primates is dominated by the OFF visual pathway and responds more strongly to dark than light stimuli. Here, we demonstrate that this cortical OFF dominance is modulated by the size and spatial frequency of the stimulus in awake primates and we uncover a main neuronal mechanism underlying this modulation. We show that large grating patterns with low spatial frequencies drive five times more OFF-dominated than ON-dominated neurons, but this pronounced cortical OFF dominance is strongly reduced when the grating size decreases and the spatial frequency increases, as when the stimulus moves away from the observer. We demonstrate that the reduction in cortical OFF dominance is not caused by a selective reduction of visual responses in OFF-dominated neurons but by a change in the ON/OFF response balance of neurons with diverse receptive field properties that can be ON or OFF dominated, simple, or complex. We conclude that cortical OFF dominance is continuously adjusted by a neuronal mechanism that modulates ON/OFF response balance in multiple cortical neurons when the spatial properties of the visual stimulus change with viewing distance and/or optical blur.
- Subjects :
- Male
genetic structures
Cognitive Neuroscience
receptive field
Action Potentials
Stimulus (physiology)
050105 experimental psychology
03 medical and health sciences
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
0302 clinical medicine
thalamus
medicine
Animals
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Visual Pathways
visual cortex
Physics
Extramural
thalamocortical
05 social sciences
Cortical neurons
Original Articles
Stimulus change
Macaca mulatta
Visual cortex
medicine.anatomical_structure
Receptive field
Space Perception
area V1
Spatial frequency
Off response
Neuroscience
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Photic Stimulation
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 14602199 and 10473211
- Volume :
- 29
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Cerebral Cortex (New York, NY)
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....14e1bd0dd27b72a5fdafbf1f93d37e29