Ohzawa I, Freeman R D
J Neurophysiol. 1986 Jul;56(1):221-42. doi: 10.1152/jn.1986.56.1.221.
We have studied the manner by which inputs from the two eyes are combined in simple cells of the cat's visual cortex. The stimuli for this study are drifting sinusoidal gratings, shown dichoptically at optimal spatial frequency and orientation. The relative spatial phase (disparity) between the gratings for left and right eyes is varied over 360 degrees. Most simple cells show phase-specific binocular interaction such that response amplitudes and phases vary depending on the relative spatial phase. At one phase, response is greater than either of the monocular responses and often greater than the sum of the two. At the phase 180 degrees away from the optimal, the cell's responses are strongly inhibited and often completely suppressed. Phase-specific binocular interaction disappears when the gratings presented to one eye are made orthogonal to the optimal orientation. The degree of binocular interaction does not depend critically on the ocular dominance of the cells. Simple cells that are nearly equally dominated by each eye always exhibit strong phase-specific interaction. The majority of cells that are strongly dominated by one eye, and even those that appear monocular, show phase-dependent changes in responses. We examined the extent of binocular interaction for cells with preferred orientations near vertical compared with those tuned to other optimal orientations. If these cells are conveying information about depth, one might expect a greater degree of binocular phase-specificity for units preferring nearly vertical orientations, which would then be processing horizontal disparities. We find no evidence for this. Predictions of simple-cell responses are derived from a linear model of binocular convergence in which light-evoked neural signals from each eye are summed linearly to determine cell responses. Data from cells generally follow the prediction of the model for both response amplitude and phase. Deviations from predictions of the linear model are found for a minority of cells. This deviation may be accounted for by a threshold mechanism that comes into play after the linear binocular summation. A small proportion of simple cells that appear monocular by alternate tests of each eye show a purely inhibitory influence from the silent eye. This inhibition is not generally dependent on the relative phase of the gratings. We conclude that most binocular interaction in striate simple cells may be accounted for by linear summation of neural signals from each eye.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
我们研究了猫视觉皮层简单细胞中来自双眼的输入是如何组合的。本研究的刺激物是漂移的正弦光栅,以双眼分视的方式呈现,具有最佳空间频率和方向。左右眼光栅之间的相对空间相位(视差)在360度范围内变化。大多数简单细胞表现出相位特异性双眼相互作用,即反应幅度和相位根据相对空间相位而变化。在某一相位,反应大于单眼反应中的任何一个,且通常大于两者之和。在与最佳相位相差180度的相位,细胞反应受到强烈抑制,且常常完全被抑制。当呈现给一只眼睛的光栅与最佳方向正交时,相位特异性双眼相互作用消失。双眼相互作用的程度并不关键地取决于细胞的眼优势。几乎被每只眼睛同等支配的简单细胞总是表现出强烈的相位特异性相互作用。大多数被一只眼睛强烈支配的细胞,甚至那些看起来是单眼的细胞,其反应也表现出相位依赖性变化。我们研究了偏好方向接近垂直的细胞与那些调谐到其他最佳方向细胞的双眼相互作用程度。如果这些细胞在传递深度信息,那么对于偏好接近垂直方向的单元,人们可能会预期更高程度的双眼相位特异性,这些单元随后会处理水平视差。但我们没有发现支持这一点的证据。简单细胞反应的预测来自双眼汇聚的线性模型,其中来自每只眼睛的光诱发神经信号线性相加以确定细胞反应。细胞数据在反应幅度和相位方面通常都遵循模型的预测。少数细胞存在与线性模型预测的偏差。这种偏差可能由线性双眼相加之后起作用的阈值机制来解释。通过对每只眼睛交替测试而看起来是单眼的一小部分简单细胞,显示出来自非活动眼的纯粹抑制性影响。这种抑制通常不依赖于光栅的相对相位。我们得出结论,纹状简单细胞中的大多数双眼相互作用可能由来自每只眼睛的神经信号的线性相加来解释。(摘要截取自400字)