Our objective in this research is to uncover what role cortical neurons play in processing temporal components in a natural visual environment. We will study for V1 neurons and for pursuit eye movements how context modulates the temporal responsiveness, because temporal changes are inherent in normal vision, and visual perception of targets in the natural visual environment is always in context . 1. We will characterize the temporal properties of different classes of V1 neuron for stimulus patterns defined by flicker, motion, color or texture and ask what factors modulate the temporal tuning functions. Neurons will be classified by laminar location and grouped into functional classes. We will study the effect of luminance and color contrast on temporal tuning curves to examine the effects of stimulus contrast on contrast gain. We will compare the effects on temporal response functions of local, overlapping adaptive stimuli with remote, contextual stimuli. In separate experiments we will determine the spatio-temporal response functions of different classes of V1 neurons with stimulus patterns defined by luminance or amplitude modulated texture. 2.
We aim to measure the spatio-temporal tuning of visual pursuit by accurate measurement of eye movements in human subjects. We will measure pursuit performance while presenting pursuit targets on textured backgrounds or surrounded by textured contextual stimuli. In this way we can compare the effects of adapting contrast and remote context on V1 neurons and oculomotor performance. Finally, we will study the sensitivity of pursuit eye movements to perturbations in speed, stimulus class or contrast to determine the degree of cue invariance for pursuit. This work will test fundamentally new views of primary visual cortex as an image processing area by determining to what extent elaborate V1 image processing has an effect on behavioral outcome. The significance of this work is its contribution to understanding the relation between cortical information processing and sensorimotor integration.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Eye Institute (NEI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01EY008300-13
Application #
6518449
Study Section
Visual Sciences B Study Section (VISB)
Program Officer
Oberdorfer, Michael
Project Start
1990-05-01
Project End
2003-11-30
Budget Start
2002-05-01
Budget End
2003-11-30
Support Year
13
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
$253,636
Indirect Cost
Name
New York University
Department
Neurology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
004514360
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10012
Henry, Christopher A; Joshi, Siddhartha; Xing, Dajun et al. (2013) Functional characterization of the extraclassical receptive field in macaque V1: contrast, orientation, and temporal dynamics. J Neurosci 33:6230-42
Henry, Christopher A; Hawken, Michael J (2013) Stability of simple/complex classification with contrast and extraclassical receptive field modulation in macaque V1. J Neurophysiol 109:1793-803
Disney, Anita A; Aoki, Chiye; Hawken, Michael J (2012) Cholinergic suppression of visual responses in primate V1 is mediated by GABAergic inhibition. J Neurophysiol 108:1907-23
Lee, Barry B; Shapley, Robert M; Hawken, Michael J et al. (2012) Spatial distributions of cone inputs to cells of the parvocellular pathway investigated with cone-isolating gratings. J Opt Soc Am A Opt Image Sci Vis 29:A223-32
Xing, Dajun; Ringach, Dario L; Hawken, Michael J et al. (2011) Untuned suppression makes a major contribution to the enhancement of orientation selectivity in macaque v1. J Neurosci 31:15972-82
Shapley, Robert; Hawken, Michael J (2011) Color in the cortex: single- and double-opponent cells. Vision Res 51:701-17
Constantinople, Christine M; Disney, Anita A; Maffie, Jonathan et al. (2009) Quantitative analysis of neurons with Kv3 potassium channel subunits, Kv3.1b and Kv3.2, in macaque primary visual cortex. J Comp Neurol 516:291-311
Johnson, Elizabeth N; Hawken, Michael J; Shapley, Robert (2008) The orientation selectivity of color-responsive neurons in macaque V1. J Neurosci 28:8096-106
Henrie, J Andrew; Shapley, Robert (2005) LFP power spectra in V1 cortex: the graded effect of stimulus contrast. J Neurophysiol 94:479-90
Mareschal, I; Sceniak, M P; Shapley, R M (2001) Contextual influences on orientation discrimination: binding local and global cues. Vision Res 41:1915-30

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