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Mixed functional microarchitectures for orientation selectivity in the mouse primary visual cortex

Authors :
Satoru Kondo
Kenichi Ohki
Takashi Yoshida
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 1-16 (2016)
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2016.

Abstract

A minicolumn is the smallest anatomical module in the cortical architecture, but it is still in debate whether it serves as functional units for cortical processing. In the rodent primary visual cortex (V1), neurons with different preferred orientations are mixed horizontally in a salt and pepper manner, but vertical functional organization was not examined. In this study, we found that neurons with similar orientation preference are weakly but significantly clustered vertically in a short length and horizontally in the scale of a minicolumn. Interestingly, the vertical clustering is found only in a part of minicolumns, and others are composed of neurons with a variety of orientation preferences. Thus, the mouse V1 is a mixture of vertical clusters of neurons with various degrees of orientation similarity, which may be the compromise between the brain size and keeping the vertical clusters of similarly tuned neurons at least in a subset of clusters.<br />Primary visual cortical neurons display mostly a salt and pepper arrangement of orientation preferences along the horizontal cortical axis. Here the authors show that a significant subset of minicolumns, one-cell wide arrays of cells arranged along the vertical axis, show similar orientation tuning preferences.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....408fbebc5cc54ea9476d5b3573dc60f8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms13210