Strong surround antagonism in the dLGN of the awake rat
Balaji Sriram, Pamela Reinagel

TL;DR
This study investigates the strength and diversity of surround antagonism in the dLGN of awake rats, revealing a range of surround strengths and a novel dual-band-pass response class, challenging previous assumptions based on anesthetized preparations.
Contribution
It provides the first characterization of surround antagonism in awake rat dLGN neurons, identifying a new dual-band-pass response class and demonstrating heterogeneity in surround strength.
Findings
Majority of neurons have well-balanced center and surround.
Identified a novel dual-band-pass tuning response class.
Strong surround antagonism exists in awake rat dLGN.
Abstract
Classical center-surround antagonism in the early visual system is thought to serve important functions such as enhancing edge detection and increasing sparseness. The relative strength of the center and surround determine the specific computation achieved. For example, weak surrounds achieve low-pass spatial frequency filtering and are optimal for denoising when signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is low. Balanced surrounds achieve band-pass spatial frequency filtering and are optimal for decorrelation of responses when SNR is high. Surround strength has been measured in the retina and dorsal Lateral Geniculate Nucleus (dLGN), primarily in anesthetized or ex vivo preparations. Here we revisit the center-surround architecture of dLGN neurons in the un-anesthetized rat. We report the spatial frequency tuning responses of N=47 neurons. We fit these tuning curves to a difference-of-Gaussians (DOG)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVisual perception and processing mechanisms · Neural dynamics and brain function · Retinal Development and Disorders
