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The Dark Side of Vision: Resolving the Neural Code

Petri Ala-Laurila
Aalto University
Apr 6, 2021

All sensory information – like what we see, hear and smell – gets encoded in spike trains by sensory neurons and gets sent to the brain. Due to the complexity of neural circuits and the difficulty of quantifying complex animal behavior, it has been exceedingly hard to resolve how the brain decodes these spike trains to drive behavior. We now measure quantal signals originating from sparse photons through the most sensitive neural circuits of the mammalian retina and correlate the retinal output spike trains with precisely quantified behavioral decisions. We utilize a combination of electrophysiological measurements on the most sensitive ON and OFF retinal ganglion cell types and a novel deep-learning based tracking technology of the head and body positions of freely-moving mice. We show that visually-guided behavior relies on information from the retinal ON pathway for the dimmest light increments and on information from the retinal OFF pathway for the dimmest light decrements (“quantal shadows”). Our results show that the distribution of labor between ON and OFF pathways starts already at starlight supporting distinct pathway-specific visual computations to drive visually-guided behavior. These results have several fundamental consequences for understanding how the brain integrates information across parallel information streams as well as for understanding the limits of sensory signal processing. In my talk, I will discuss some of the most eminent consequences including the extension of this “Quantum Behavior” paradigm from mouse vision to monkey and human visual systems.

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