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Original title:
Spatiotemporal Adaptation in the Corticogeniculate Loop
Translated title:
Raumzeitliche Adaptation in der kortikal-geniculaten Schleife
Author:
Hillenbrand, Ulrich
Year:
2001
Document type:
Dissertation
Faculty/School:
Fakultät für Physik
Advisor:
van Hemmen, J. Leo (Prof. Dr.)
Referee:
van Hemmen, J. Leo (Prof. Dr.); Sackmann, Erich (Prof. Dr.)
Format:
Text
Language:
en
Subject group:
PHY Physik
Keywords:
vision; adaptation; visual motion; velocity tuning; object segmentation; noise suppression; visual system; thalamocortical system; cortical feedback; thalamus; lateral geniculate nucleus; visual cortex; ion channel; stochastic process; neuroscience; biophysics
Translated keywords:
Sehen; Adaptation; visuelle Bewegung; Geschwindigkeitsselektivität; Objektsegmentierung; Rauschunterdrückung; visuelles System; thalamisch-kortikales System; kortikale Rückkopplung; Thalamus; Corpus Geniculatum Laterale; visueller Kortex; Ionenkanal; stochastischer Prozess; Neurowissenschaft; Biophysik
Controlled terms:
Sehrinde; Corpus genitulatum laterale; Rückkopplung; Geschwindigkeit; Modell
TUM classification:
PHY 826d
Abstract:
The thalamus is the major gate to the cortex for almost all sensory signals, for input from various subcortical sources such as the cerebellum and the mammillary bodies, and for reentrant cortical information. Thalamic nuclei do not merely relay information to the cortex but perform some operation on it while being modulated by various transmitter systems and in continuous interplay with their cortical target areas. Indeed, cortical feedback to the thalamus is the anatomically dominant input to relay cells even in those thalamic nuclei that are directly driven by sensory systems. While it is well-established that the receptive fields of cortical neurons are strongly influenced by convergent thalamic inputs of different types, the modulation effected by cortical feedback in thalamic response has been difficult to interpret. Experiments and theoretical considerations have pointed to a variety of operations of the visual cortex on the visual thalamus, the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN), such as control of binocular disparity for stereopsis (Schmielau & Singer, 1977), attention-related gating of relay cells (Sherman & Koch, 1986), gain control of relay cells (Koch, 1987), synchronizing firing of neighboring relay cells (Sillito et al., 1994; Singer 1994), increasing visual information in relay cells' output (McClurkin et al., 1994), and switching relay cells from a detection to an analyzing mode (Godwin et al., 1996; Sherman, 1996; Sherman & Guillery, 1996). Nonetheless, the evidence for any particular function is still sparse and rather indirect to date. Clearly, detailed concepts of the interdependency of thalamic and cortical operation could greatly advance our knowledge about complex sensory, and ultimately cognitive, processing. Here we present a novel view on the corticothalamic puzzle by proposing that control of velocity tuning of visual cortical neurons may be an eminent function of corticogeniculate processing. The hypothesis is advanced by studying a model of the primary visual pathway in extensive computer simulations. At the heart of the model is a biophysical account of the electrical membrane properties of thalamic relay neurons (Huguenard & McCormick, 1992; McCormick & Huguenard, 1992) that includes 12 ionic conductances. Among the different effects that corticogeniculate feedback may have on relay cells, we focus on the modulation of their relay mode (between tonic and burst mode) by control of their resting membrane potential. Employing two distinct temporal-response types of geniculate relay neurons (lagged and nonlagged), we find that shifts in membrane potential affect the temporal response properties of relay cells in a way that alters the tuning of cortical cells for speed. Given the loop of information from the LGN to cortical layer 4, via a variable number of synapses to layer 6, and back to the LGN, the question arises, what are likely implications of adaptive speed tuning for visual information processing? Based on some fairly general considerations concerning the nature of motion information, we devise a simple model of the corticogeniculate loop that utilizes adaptive speed tuning for the fundamental task of segmentation of objects in motion. A detailed mathematical analysis of the model's behavior is presented. Treating visual stimulation as a stochastic process that drives the adaptation dynamics, we prove the model's object-segmentation capabilities and reveal some non-intended properties, such as oscillatory responses, that are consequences of its basic design. Several aspects of the dynamics in the loop are discussed in relation to experimental data.
Translated abstract:
Eine neue Hypothese über die visuelle Informationsverarbeitung in der synaptischen Schleife zwischen Corpus Geniculatum Laterale (CGL) und visuellem Kortex wird entwickelt. Aus umfangreichen Computersimulationen wird der Einfluss kortikaler Eingänge auf die zeitlichen Übertragungseigenschaften des CGL und schließlich auf kortikale Geschwindigkeitsselektivität gefolgert. Davon ausgehend wird ein Modell der kortikal-geniculaten Schleife entworfen und detailliert mathematisch untersucht. Insbesonde...     »
Publication :
Universitätsbibliothek der TU München
WWW:
https://mediatum.ub.tum.de/?id=602876
Date of submission:
29.02.2000
Oral examination:
06.02.2001
File size:
3767132 bytes
Pages:
176
Urn (citeable URL):
https://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:91-diss2001020613098
Last change:
25.07.2007
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