Modulation of Fast Narrowband Oscillations in the Mouse Retina and dLGN According to Background Light Intensity

Mice, Knockout Retinal Ganglion Cells 0303 health sciences Light Rod Opsins Geniculate Bodies Retina Mice 03 medical and health sciences Electroretinography Animals Gamma Rhythm Visual Pathways Wakefulness Photic Stimulation Vision, Ocular
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2016.12.027 Publication Date: 2017-01-18T19:32:47Z
ABSTRACT
Background light intensity (irradiance) substantially impacts the visual code in the early visual system at synaptic and single-neuron levels, but its influence on population activity is largely unexplored. We show that fast narrowband oscillations, an important feature of population activity, systematically increase in amplitude as a function of irradiance in both anesthetized and awake, freely moving mice and at the level of the retina and dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN). Narrowband coherence increases with irradiance across large areas of the dLGN, but especially for neighboring units. The spectral sensitivity of these effects and their substantial reduction in melanopsin knockout animals indicate a contribution from inner retinal photoreceptors. At bright backgrounds, narrowband coherence allows pooling of single-unit responses to become a viable strategy for enhancing visual signals within its frequency range.
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