LOCOMOTION MODULATES VISUAL ADAPTATION IN THE MOUSE RETINO-COLLICULAR CIRCUIT
University of Sussex
Presentation
Date TBA
Event Information
Poster Board
PS01-07AM-626
Poster
View posterAbstract
We used Neuropixels probes to record retinal ganglion cell axons and neurons across superficial and deep layers of the mouse superior colliculus (SC), a layered midbrain structure integrating visual and motor signals. We presented drifting gratings of 2 s duration, while head-fixed mice were free to run on a wheel.
Neural responses were classified by fitting exponential functions, yielding four response types: depressing, sensitising, biphasic, and non-adapting. From these fits, we quantified adaptation strength (relative change in firing rate) and adaptation speed (exponential time constant, τ). More than 85% of visually responsive retinal axons and SC neurons exhibited adapting responses, most commonly depressing (80%). From stimulus onset to offset, firing rate dropped by 17% in retinal axons, 44% in superficial and 48% in deep SC neurons. Locomotion further increased adaptation strength in all populations, with the largest effect in deep SC (20%). During stationary periods, adaptation slowed progressively along the pathway (from 0.20 s in retinal axons to 0.26 s in deep SC). During locomotion, adaptation speeds converged across populations (0.20 s). These effects could not be explained by variations in mean firing rate.
Together, locomotion modulates spike-rate adaptation from the retina onward and may optimize visual processing during movement.
Recommended posters
CORTICO-SUBCORTICAL DYNAMICS UNDERLYING ADAPTIVE LOCOMOTION
Martin Esparza, Ioana Lazar, Catia Fortunato, Mostafa Safaie, Juan Gallego
RUNNING ENHANCES VISUAL CODING IN STRIATAL NEURONS
Job Perez-Becerra, Luis Carrillo-Reid
EMERGENT LOCOMOTION-RELATED SIGNALS DOMINATE TUNING OF PRIMARY VISUAL CORTICAL NEURONS DURING LINEAR DISPLACEMENT
Mateo Velez-Fort, Laura Porta, Troy W. Margrie
MIDBRAIN CIRCUITS FOR THE PURSUIT OF MOVING TARGETS IN MICE
Marcelo Moglie, Yi Yang, Ayesha Pointer, Gaia Bianchini, Ainiah Masood, Xavier Cano-Ferrer, Florencia Iacaruso
EXPLORING SENSORY & MOTOR COORDINATION FOR PERCEPTUAL STABILITY IN THE MOUSE VISUAL SYSTEM
Gloria Fuhrmann, Maximilian Jösch
POPULATION CODING OF LOCOMOTION BY SENSORY AFFERENT NEURONS IN THE AWAKE MOUSE
Phill Bokiniec, Ryan J. Gibbons, Clarissa J. Whitmire