Retinal Signal Processing Laboratory, Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Biomedical Physics and Biomedical Optics, Amsterdam University Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
J Physiol. 2022 Jan;600(1):123-142. doi: 10.1113/JP282152. Epub 2021 Dec 8.
Psychophysical data indicate that humans can discriminate visual scenes based on their skewness, i.e. the ratio of dark and bright patches within a visual scene. It has also been shown that at a phenomenological level this skew discrimination is described by the so-called blackshot mechanism, which accentuates strong negative contrasts within a scene. Here, we present a set of observations suggesting that the underlying computation might start as early as the cone phototransduction cascade, whose gain is higher for strong negative contrasts than for strong positive contrasts. We recorded from goldfish cone photoreceptors and found that the asymmetry in the phototransduction gain leads to responses with larger amplitudes when using negatively rather than positively skewed light stimuli. This asymmetry in amplitude was present in the cone photocurrent, voltage response and synaptic output. Given that the properties of the phototransduction cascade are universal across vertebrates, it is possible that the mechanism shown here gives rise to a general ability to discriminate between scenes based only on their skewness, which psychophysical studies have shown humans can do. Thus, our data suggest the importance of non-linearity of the early photoreceptor for perception. Additionally, we found that stimulus skewness leads to a subtle change in photoreceptor kinetics. For negatively skewed stimuli, the impulse response functions of the cone peak later than for positively skewed stimuli. However, stimulus skewness does not affect the overall integration time of the cone. KEY POINTS: Humans can discriminate visual scenes based on skewness, i.e. the relative prevalence of bright and dark patches within a scene. Here, we show that negatively skewed time-series stimuli induce larger responses in goldfish cone photoreceptors than comparable positively skewed stimuli. This response asymmetry originates from within the phototransduction cascade, where gain is higher for strong negative contrasts (dark patches) than for strong positive contrasts (bright patches). Unlike the implicit assumption often contained within models of downstream visual neurons, our data show that cone photoreceptors do not simply relay linearly filtered versions of visual stimuli to downstream circuitry, but that they also emphasize specific stimulus features. Given that the phototransduction cascade properties among vertebrate retinas are mostly universal, our data imply that the skew discrimination by human subjects reported in psychophysical studies might stem from the asymmetric gain function of the phototransduction cascade.
心理物理学数据表明,人类可以根据视觉场景的偏斜度(即场景中明暗斑块的比例)来区分视觉场景。已经表明,在现象学水平上,这种偏斜度的辨别是由所谓的黑射击机制来描述的,该机制强调了场景中强烈的负对比。在这里,我们提出了一系列观察结果,表明潜在的计算可能早在视锥光转导级联中就开始了,该级联的增益对于强烈的负对比比对强烈的正对比更高。我们从金鱼视锥细胞中记录到,发现光转导增益的不对称导致当使用负偏斜而不是正偏斜的光刺激时,响应的幅度更大。这种在幅度上的不对称性存在于视锥光电流、电压响应和突触输出中。鉴于视锥光转导级联的特性在所有脊椎动物中都是普遍存在的,因此这里显示的机制可能导致一种仅根据偏斜度来区分场景的一般能力,这已经被心理物理学研究表明人类可以做到。因此,我们的数据表明早期光感受器的非线性对于感知很重要。此外,我们发现刺激偏斜会导致光感受器动力学的微妙变化。对于负偏斜的刺激,视锥峰的脉冲响应函数比正偏斜的刺激晚。然而,刺激偏斜不会影响视锥的整体积分时间。 关键点:人类可以根据偏斜度(即场景中明亮和黑暗斑块的相对流行度)来区分视觉场景。在这里,我们表明,负偏斜时间序列刺激在金鱼视锥细胞中诱导的反应比可比的正偏斜刺激更大。这种响应不对称性源自光转导级联内部,其中增益对于强负对比(暗斑)比对强正对比(亮斑)更高。与下游视觉神经元模型中通常包含的隐含假设不同,我们的数据表明,视锥细胞不仅简单地将视觉刺激的线性滤波版本传递给下游电路,而且还强调特定的刺激特征。鉴于脊椎动物视网膜中的光转导级联特性在大多数情况下是普遍存在的,我们的数据意味着心理物理学研究中报告的人类受试者的偏斜度辨别可能源于光转导级联的不对称增益功能。