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Related Concept Videos

Vision01:24

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Vision is the result of light being detected and transduced into neural signals by the retina of the eye. This information is then further analyzed and interpreted by the brain. First, light enters the front of the eye and is focused by the cornea and lens onto the retina—a thin sheet of neural tissue lining the back of the eye. Because of refraction through the convex lens of the eye, images are projected onto the retina upside-down and reversed.
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The eye is a spherical, hollow structure composed of three tissue layers. The outer layer — the fibrous tunic, comprises the sclera — a white structure — and the cornea, which is transparent. The sclera encompasses some of the ocular surface, most of which is not visible. However, the 'white of the eye' is distinctively visible in humans compared to other species. The cornea, a clear covering at the front of the eye, enables light penetration. The eye's middle...
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The retina is a layer of nervous tissue at the back of the eye that transduces light into neural signals. This process, called phototransduction, is carried out by rod and cone photoreceptor cells in the back of the retina.
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 2, 2025

Monocular Visual Deprivation and Ocular Dominance Plasticity Measurement in the Mouse Primary Visual Cortex
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Luminance invariant encoding in mouse primary visual cortex.

Ronan T O'Shea1, Ian Nauhaus2, Xue-Xin Wei3

  • 1Center for Perceptual Systems, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, USA; Department of Psychology, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, USA.

Cell Reports
|January 16, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

The visual system adapts to varying light levels by adjusting retinal output but maintains consistent visual cortex selectivity. This stability is achieved through parallel pathways from the thalamus to the cortex, ensuring reliable visual processing.

Keywords:
CP: Neuroscienceadaptationlateral geniculate nucleusprimary visual cortexretinarodentsthalamus

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Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Visual System Physiology
  • Sensory Adaptation

Background:

  • The visual system must adapt to a wide range of light intensities to maintain sensitivity and selectivity.
  • The retina utilizes rod and cone photoreceptors, altering retinal ganglion cell (RGC) properties to adapt to light changes.
  • Different light levels necessitate varying neural codes for visual information transmission.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how luminance adaptation affects neural population activity in the thalamus and primary visual cortex (V1).
  • To understand how downstream visual targets encode visual scenes across different light levels.
  • To elucidate the mechanisms by which the visual system maintains sensitivity and selectivity under varying luminance conditions.

Main Methods:

  • Measured population activity in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) and V1 under different luminance conditions.
  • Analyzed changes in neural selectivity and receptive fields in response to luminance adaptation.
  • Investigated the convergence of parallel thalamocortical pathways.

Main Results:

  • Retinal output adaptations are observable in the LGN.
  • Visual cortex (V1) selectivity remains largely invariant despite changes in luminance.
  • Evidence suggests parallel functional pathways from the thalamus to the cortex contribute to stable cortical selectivity.
  • The visual system maintains sensitivity across environmental conditions without altering cortical selectivity.

Conclusions:

  • The primary visual cortex exhibits remarkable stability in its encoding of visual information across different light levels.
  • Convergence of parallel thalamocortical pathways is a key mechanism for maintaining visual processing robustness.
  • The visual system achieves adaptation to luminance by adjusting retinal and thalamic processing while preserving cortical representations.