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Superior Colliculus

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superior colliculus

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35 curated items23 ePosters12 Seminars
Updated 8 months ago
35 items · superior colliculus
35 results
SeminarNeuroscience

Retinal input integration in excitatory and inhibitory neurons in the mouse superior colliculus in vivo

Prof. Jens Kremkow
Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg
Apr 8, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Vision for perception versus vision for action: dissociable contributions of visual sensory drives from primary visual cortex and superior colliculus neurons to orienting behaviors

Prof. Dr. Ziad M. Hafed
Werner Reichardt Center for Integrative Neuroscience, and Hertie Institute for Clinical Brain Research University of Tübingen
Feb 11, 2025

The primary visual cortex (V1) directly projects to the superior colliculus (SC) and is believed to provide sensory drive for eye movements. Consistent with this, a majority of saccade-related SC neurons also exhibit short-latency, stimulus-driven visual responses, which are additionally feature-tuned. However, direct neurophysiological comparisons of the visual response properties of the two anatomically-connected brain areas are surprisingly lacking, especially with respect to active looking behaviors. I will describe a series of experiments characterizing visual response properties in primate V1 and SC neurons, exploring feature dimensions like visual field location, spatial frequency, orientation, contrast, and luminance polarity. The results suggest a substantial, qualitative reformatting of SC visual responses when compared to V1. For example, SC visual response latencies are actively delayed, independent of individual neuron tuning preferences, as a function of increasing spatial frequency, and this phenomenon is directly correlated with saccadic reaction times. Such “coarse-to-fine” rank ordering of SC visual response latencies as a function of spatial frequency is much weaker in V1, suggesting a dissociation of V1 responses from saccade timing. Consistent with this, when we next explored trial-by-trial correlations of individual neurons’ visual response strengths and visual response latencies with saccadic reaction times, we found that most SC neurons exhibited, on a trial-by-trial basis, stronger and earlier visual responses for faster saccadic reaction times. Moreover, these correlations were substantially higher for visual-motor neurons in the intermediate and deep layers than for more superficial visual-only neurons. No such correlations existed systematically in V1. Thus, visual responses in SC and V1 serve fundamentally different roles in active vision: V1 jumpstarts sensing and image analysis, but SC jumpstarts moving. I will finish by demonstrating, using V1 reversible inactivation, that, despite reformatting of signals from V1 to the brainstem, V1 is still a necessary gateway for visually-driven oculomotor responses to occur, even for the most reflexive of eye movement phenomena. This is a fundamental difference from rodent studies demonstrating clear V1-independent processing in afferent visual pathways bypassing the geniculostriate one, and it demonstrates the importance of multi-species comparisons in the study of oculomotor control.

SeminarNeuroscience

Dissociation between superior colliculus visual response properties and short- latency ocular position drift responses

Tatiana Malevich and Fatemeh Khademi
Mar 10, 2023
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

A neural mechanism for terminating decisions

Gabriel Stine
Shadlen Lab, Columbia University
Sep 20, 2022

The brain makes decisions by accumulating evidence until there is enough to stop and choose. Neural mechanisms of evidence accumulation are well established in association cortex, but the site and mechanism of termination is unknown. Here, we elucidate a mechanism for termination by neurons in the primate superior colliculus. We recorded simultaneously from neurons in lateral intraparietal cortex (LIP) and the superior colliculus (SC) while monkeys made perceptual decisions, reported by eye-movements. Single-trial analyses revealed distinct dynamics: LIP tracked the accumulation of evidence on each decision, and SC generated one burst at the end of the decision, occasionally preceded by smaller bursts. We hypothesized that the bursts manifest a threshold mechanism applied to LIP activity to terminate the decision. Focal inactivation of SC produced behavioral effects diagnostic of an impaired threshold sensor, requiring a stronger LIP signal to terminate a decision. The results reveal the transformation from deliberation to commitment.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Mechanisms of visual circuit development: aligning topographic maps of space

Jason Triplett
Department of Pharmacology & Physiology & Pediatrics, The George Washington University - Center for Neurosciences Research, The Children’s National.
Mar 21, 2022
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Multisensory Integration: Development, Plasticity, and Translational Applications

Benjamin A. Rowland
Wake Forest School of Medicine
Sep 20, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

Visual Processing in the Superior Colliculus

Jianhua Cang
University of Virginia
Jun 21, 2021
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Deciding to stop deciding: A cortical-subcortical circuit for forming and terminating a decision

Michael Shadlen
Columbia University
Jun 9, 2021

The neurobiology of decision-making is informed by neurons capable of representing information over time scales of seconds. Such neurons were initially characterized in studies of spatial working memory, motor planning (e.g., Richard Andersen lab) and spatial attention. For decision-making, such neurons emit graded spike rates, that represent the accumulated evidence for or against a choice. They establish the conduit between the formation of the decision and its completion, usually in the form of a commitment to an action, even if provisional. Indeed, many decisions appear to arise through an accumulation of noisy samples of evidence to a terminating threshold, or bound. Previous studies show that single neurons in the lateral intraparietal area (LIP) represent the accumulation of evidence when monkeys make decisions about the direction of random dot motion (RDM) and express their decision with a saccade to the neuron’s preferred target. The mechanism of termination (the bound) is elusive. LIP is interconnected with other brain regions that also display decision-related activity. Whether these areas play roles in the decision process that are similar to or fundamentally different from that of LIP is unclear. I will present new unpublished experiments that begin to resolve these issues by recording from populations of neurons simultaneously in LIP and one of its primary targets, the superior colliculus (SC), while monkeys make difficult perceptual decisions.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Arousal modulates retinal output

Sylvia Schröder
University of Sussex
Feb 21, 2021

Neural responses in the visual system are usually not purely visual but depend on behavioural and internal states such as arousal. This dependence is seen both in primary visual cortex (V1) and in subcortical brain structures receiving direct retinal input. In this talk, I will show that modulation by behavioural state arises as early as in the output of the retina.To measure retinal activity in the awake, intact brain, we imaged the synaptic boutons of retinal axons in the superficial superior colliculus (sSC) of mice. The activity of about half of the boutons depended not only on vision but also on running speed and pupil size, regardless of retinal illumination. Arousal typically reduced the boutons’ visual responses to preferred direction and their selectivity for direction and orientation.Arousal may affect activity in retinal boutons by presynaptic neuromodulation. To test whether the effects of arousal occur already in the retina, we recorded from retinal axons in the optic tract. We found that, in darkness, more than one third of the recorded axons was significantly correlated with running speed. Arousal had similar effects postsynaptically, in sSC neurons, independent of activity in V1, the other main source of visual inputs to colliculus. Optogenetic inactivation of V1 generally decreased activity in collicular neurons but did not diminish the effects of arousal. These results indicate that arousal modulates activity at every stage of the visual system. In the future, we will study the purpose and the underlying mechanisms of behavioural modulation in the early visual system

SeminarNeuroscience

Interaction between the superior colliculus and the visual cortex?

Alexander Heimel
Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Dec 6, 2020
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Motion processing across visual field locations in zebrafish

Aristides Arrenberg
University of Tuebingen
Sep 27, 2020

Animals are able to perceive self-motion and navigate in their environment using optic flow information. They often perform visually guided stabilization behaviors like the optokinetic (OKR) or optomotor response (OMR) in order to maintain their eye and body position relative to the moving surround. But how does the animal manage to perform appropriate behavioral response and how are processing tasks divided between the various non-cortical visual brain areas? Experiments have shown that the zebrafish pretectum, which is homologous to the mammalian accessory optic system, is involved in the OKR and OMR. The optic tectum (superior colliculus in mammals) is involved in processing of small stimuli, e.g. during prey capture. We have previously shown that many pretectal neurons respond selectively to rotational or translational motion. These neurons are likely detectors for specific optic flow patterns and mediate behavioral choices of the animal based on optic flow information. We investigate the motion feature extraction of brain structures that receive input from retinal ganglion cells to identify the visual computations that underlie behavioral decisions during prey capture, OKR, OMR and other visually mediate behaviors. Our study of receptive fields shows that receptive field sizes in pretectum (large) and tectum (small) are very different and that pretectal responses are diverse and anatomically organized. Since calcium indicators are slow and receptive fields for motion stimuli are difficult to measure, we also develop novel stimuli and statistical methods to infer the neuronal computations of visual brain areas.

ePoster

Generalizing deep neural network model captures the functional organization of feature selective retinal ganglion cell axonal boutons in the superior colliculus

Mels Akhmetali, Yongrong Qiu, Na Zhou, Lisa Schmors, Andreas Tolias, Jacob Reimer, Katrin Franke, Fabian Sinz

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Abstract cognitive encoding in the primate superior colliculus

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Emergence of an orientation map in the mouse superior colliculus from stage III retinal waves

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

A neural mechanism for the termination of perceptual decisions in the primate superior colliculus

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

A neural mechanism for the termination of perceptual decisions in the primate superior colliculus

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Reward modulates visual responses in mouse superior colliculus independently of arousal

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

Reward modulates visual responses in mouse superior colliculus independently of arousal

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

A low-dimensional signature of global brain state in the superior colliculus of the macaque

Richard Johnston & Matthew Smith

COSYNE 2023

ePoster

Single-cell precision of axonal projection from the retina to the superior colliculus in mice

Hiroki Asari

COSYNE 2023

ePoster

Superior colliculus supports touch-guided corrections during licking in mice

Brendan Ito, Brian Kardon, Jesse Goldberg

COSYNE 2023

ePoster

Independent encoding of salience, value, and attention in primate superior colliculus

Matthew Murawski

COSYNE 2025

ePoster

Atypical cortical feedback underlies failure to process contextual information in the superior colliculus of Scn2a+/- autism model mice

Leiron Ferrarese, Hiroki Asari

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Characterization of retinal signal transformation in the mouse superior colliculus

Firdaouss Zemmouri, Hiroki Asari

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

The influence of locomotion on visual tuning of neurons in the superficial superior colliculus of mice

Maria Cozan, Liad Baruchin, Sylvia Schröder

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

The influence of locomotion on visual tuning of neurons in the superficial superior colliculus of mice

Liad Baruchin, Maria Cozan, Sylvia Schroeder

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Locomotion modulates visual adaptation in the mouse superior colliculus

Maria Florencia Gonzalez Fleitas, Liad Jacob Baruchin, Sylvia Schröder

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Modality specificity of multisensory integration and decision-making in frontal cortex and superior colliculus

Alice Despatin, Irene Lenzi, Severin Graff, Kerstin Doerenkamp, Gerion Nabbefeld, Maria Laura Pérez, Anoushka Jain, Sonja Grün, Björn Kampa, Simon Musall

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Molecular and connective heterogeneity in the Pitx2on population in the mouse superior colliculus

Elena Williams, Ernesto Ciabatti, David Posner, Fabio Morgese, Marco Tripodi

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Multipotent progenitors instruct ontogeny of the superior colliculus

Giselle Cheung, Florian M. Pauler, Peter Koppensteiner, Thomas Krausgruber, Carmen Streicher, Martin Schrammel, Natalie Gutmann-Özgen, Alexis E. Ivec, Christoph Bock, Ryuichi Shigemoto, Simon Hippenmeyer

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Neural dynamics during a visual attention and perception task in the superior colliculus

Florian Schmidt, Anton Sumser, Maximilian Jösch

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Study of superior colliculus to the inferior olive pathway in mice

Deviana David, Marylka Yoe Uussisaari

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Superior colliculus as a key player in Huntington’s disease sensorimotor coordination deficits: From circuits to behaviour

Melike Küçükerden, Sara Conde-Berriozabal, Laia Sitjà-Roqueta, Maryam Givehchi, Guadalupe Soria, Manuel Jose Rodríguez, Jordi Alberch, Mercè Masana

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Temporal integration of audio-visual stimuli in the mouse superior colliculus

Gaia Bianchini, Xavier Cano Ferrer, George Konstantinou, Maria Florencia Iacaruso

FENS Forum 2024