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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Wiring up direction selective circuits in the retina

Marla Feller

Prof.

University of California, Berkeley

Schedule
Tuesday, June 23, 2020

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Schedule

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

8:00 PM Europe/Berlin

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Host: Tubingen Neuro Campus

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Recording provided by the organiser.

Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

Tubingen Neuro Campus

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

The development of neural circuits is profoundly impacted by both spontaneous and sensory experience. This is perhaps most well studied in the visual system, where disruption of early spontaneous activity called retinal waves prior to eye opening and visual deprivation after eye opening leads to alterations in the response properties and connectivity in several visual centers in the brain. We address this question in the retina, which comprises multiple circuits that encode different features of the visual scene, culminating in over 40 different types of retinal ganglion cells. Direction-selective ganglion cells respond strongly to an image moving in the preferred direction and weakly to an image moving in the opposite, or null, direction. Moreover, as recently described (Sabbah et al, 2017) the preferred directions of direction selective ganglion cells cluster along four directions that align along two optic flow axes, causing variation of the relative orientation of preferred directions along the retinal surface. I will provide recent progress in the lab that addresses the role of visual experience and spontaneous retinal waves in the establishment of direction selective tuning and direction selectivity maps in the retina.

Topics

connectivitydirection selectiveneural circuitsoptic flowpreferred directionretinaretinal ganglion cellsretinal wavessensory experiencetwo-photon imagingvisionvisual system

About the Speaker

Marla Feller

Prof.

University of California, Berkeley

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

fellerlab.squarespace.com

@FellerMarla

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/FellerMarla

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