Hunt Joshua B, Buteau Anna, Barreto Joe, Hanson Spencer, Scholl Benjamin, Poleg-Polsky Alon, Felsen Gidon
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO 80045.
Neuroscience Graduate Program, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO 80045.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Jul 22;122(29):e2425788122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2425788122. Epub 2025 Jul 16.
How do sensory systems account for stimuli generated by natural behavior? We addressed this question by examining how an ethologically relevant class of saccades modulates visual representations in the mouse superior colliculus (SC), a key region for sensorimotor integration. Leveraging the conserved natural tendency to make saccades that reset the eye-head angle to a default position via the optokinetic reflex, we developed an efficient and unbiased "white noise" approach to study the modulation of representations of visual stimuli by stochastically timed resetting saccades in large neuronal populations in awake, untrained head-fixed mice. Extracellular Neuropixels recordings revealed that saccades significantly impacted population representations of the visual probes in the SC, with early enhancement that began prior to saccade initiation and pronounced suppression for several hundred milliseconds following saccades, independent of units' visual response properties or directional tuning. To determine whether visual or motor signals are responsible for saccadic modulation, we presented fictive saccades-rapid translations of the visual scene-that simulated the visual experience during saccades in the absence of motor output. Some units exhibited similar modulation by fictive and real saccades, suggesting a sensory-driven origin of saccadic modulation, while others had dissimilar modulation, indicating a motor contribution. These findings establish a simple and robust mouse model to study how movements affect sensory representations and advance our understanding of the neural basis of natural visual coding across species and behaviors.
感觉系统如何解释自然行为产生的刺激?我们通过研究一类与行为学相关的扫视如何调节小鼠上丘(SC)中的视觉表征来解决这个问题,上丘是感觉运动整合的关键区域。利用通过视动反射将眼头角度重置为默认位置的扫视的保守自然倾向,我们开发了一种高效且无偏差的“白噪声”方法,以研究在清醒、未训练的头部固定小鼠的大神经元群体中,随机定时重置扫视对视觉刺激表征的调节作用。细胞外神经像素记录显示,扫视显著影响了上丘中视觉探针的群体表征,在扫视开始前就开始出现早期增强,并在扫视后几百毫秒内出现明显抑制,这与神经元的视觉反应特性或方向调谐无关。为了确定视觉信号还是运动信号导致了扫视调制,我们呈现了虚拟扫视——视觉场景的快速平移——模拟了在没有运动输出的情况下扫视期间的视觉体验。一些神经元对虚拟扫视和真实扫视表现出相似的调制,表明扫视调制起源于感觉驱动,而另一些则表现出不同的调制,表示存在运动贡献。这些发现建立了一个简单而强大的小鼠模型,用于研究运动如何影响感觉表征,并推进了我们对跨物种和行为的自然视觉编码神经基础的理解。