Published December 5, 2013 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Transformation of Stimulus Correlations by the Retina

  • 1. University of Pennsylvania
  • 2. Institute of Science and Technology Austria
  • 3. University of Chicago

Description

Redundancies and correlations in the responses of sensory neurons may seem to waste neural resources, but they can also carry cues about structured stimuli and may help the brain to correct for response errors. To investigate the effect of stimulus structure on redundancy in retina, we measured simultaneous responses from populations of retinal ganglion cells presented with natural and artificial stimuli that varied greatly in correlation structure; these stimuli and recordings are publicly available online. Responding to spatio-temporally structured stimuli such as natural movies, pairs of ganglion cells were modestly more correlated than in response to white noise checkerboards, but they were much less correlated than predicted by a non-adapting functional model of retinal response. Meanwhile, responding to stimuli with purely spatial correlations, pairs of ganglion cells showed increased correlations consistent with a static, non-adapting receptive field and nonlinearity. We found that in response to spatio-temporally correlated stimuli, ganglion cells had faster temporal kernels and tended to have stronger surrounds. These properties of individual cells, along with gain changes that opposed changes in effective contrast at the ganglion cell input, largely explained the pattern of pairwise correlations across stimuli where receptive field measurements were possible.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003344
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10280

Funding

National Institutes of Health
5-T90-DA022763-05
National Institutes of Health
5-T32-EY007035-32
National Institutes of Health
P30 EY001583
National Science Foundation
PHY-1058202
National Science Foundation
EF-0928048
National Science Foundation
DMR08-32802
C.V. Starr Foundation
Aspen Center for Physics
Fondation Pierre Gilles de Gennes

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Organismal Biology and Anatomy