Hoshal Benjamin D, Holmes Caroline M, Bojanek Kyle, Salisbury Jared M, Berry Michael J, Marre Olivier, Palmer Stephanie E
Committee on Computational Neuroscience, Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637.
Department of Physics, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08540.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Dec 24;121(52):e2313676121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2313676121. Epub 2024 Dec 19.
Everything that the brain sees must first be encoded by the retina, which maintains a reliable representation of the visual world in many different, complex natural scenes while also adapting to stimulus changes. This study quantifies whether and how the brain selectively encodes stimulus features about scene identity in complex naturalistic environments. While a wealth of previous work has dug into the static and dynamic features of the population code in retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), less is known about how populations form both flexible and reliable encoding in natural moving scenes. We record from the larval salamander retina responding to five different natural movies, over many repeats, and use these data to characterize the population code in terms of single-cell fluctuations in rate and pairwise couplings between cells. Decomposing the population code into independent and cell-cell interactions reveals how broad scene structure is encoded in the retinal output. while the single-cell activity adapts to different stimuli, the population structure captured in the sparse, strong couplings is consistent across natural movies as well as synthetic stimuli. We show that these interactions contribute to encoding scene identity. We also demonstrate that this structure likely arises in part from shared bipolar cell input as well as from gap junctions between RGCs and amacrine cells.
大脑所看到的一切都必须首先由视网膜进行编码,视网膜在许多不同的复杂自然场景中维持着视觉世界的可靠表征,同时还能适应刺激变化。本研究量化了大脑在复杂自然环境中是否以及如何选择性地编码有关场景识别的刺激特征。虽然此前大量工作深入研究了视网膜神经节细胞(RGC)群体编码的静态和动态特征,但对于群体在自然动态场景中如何形成灵活且可靠的编码却知之甚少。我们在幼体蝾螈视网膜对五部不同自然电影的多次重复响应中进行记录,并利用这些数据从单细胞速率波动和细胞间成对耦合的角度来表征群体编码。将群体编码分解为独立的和细胞间的相互作用,揭示了视网膜输出中广泛场景结构是如何被编码的。虽然单细胞活动适应不同刺激,但在稀疏、强耦合中捕获的群体结构在自然电影以及合成刺激中都是一致的。我们表明这些相互作用有助于编码场景识别。我们还证明这种结构可能部分源于共享的双极细胞输入以及RGC与无长突细胞之间的缝隙连接。