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Publication : Spatial modulation of dark versus bright stimulus responses in the mouse visual system.

First Author  Williams B Year  2021
Journal  Curr Biol Volume  31
Issue  18 Pages  4172-4179.e6
PubMed ID  34314675 Mgi Jnum  J:358993
Mgi Id  MGI:6789274 Doi  10.1016/j.cub.2021.06.094
Citation  Williams B, et al. (2021) Spatial modulation of dark versus bright stimulus responses in the mouse visual system. Curr Biol 31(18):4172-4179.e6
abstractText  A fundamental task of the visual system is to respond to both increases and decreases of luminance with action potentials (ON and OFF responses(1-4)). OFF responses are stronger, faster, and more salient than ON responses in primary visual cortex (V1) of both cats(5)(,)(6) and primates,(7)(,)(8) but in ferrets(9) and mice,(10) ON responses can be stronger, weaker,(11) or balanced(12) in comparison to OFF responses. These discrepancies could arise from differences in species, experimental techniques, or stimulus properties, particularly retinotopic location in the visual field, as has been speculated;(9) however, the role of retinotopy for ON/OFF dominance has not been systematically tested across multiple scales of neural activity within species. Here, we measured OFF versus ON responses across large portions of visual space with silicon probe and whole-cell patch-clamp recordings in mouse V1 and lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN). We found that OFF responses dominated in the central visual field, whereas ON and OFF responses were more balanced in the periphery. These findings were consistent across local field potential (LFP), spikes, and subthreshold membrane potential in V1, and were aligned with spatial biases in ON and OFF responses in LGN. Our findings reveal that retinotopy may provide a common organizing principle for spatial modulation of OFF versus ON processing in mammalian visual systems.
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