ELSC Seminar Series
Home » ELSC Seminar Series » Theory of feature selectivity in rodent primary visual cortex
Prof. David Hansel
Theory of feature selectivity in rodent primary visual cortex
The connectivity principles underlying the emergence of orientation selectivity in the primary visual cortex (V1) of mammals lacking an orientation map (such as rodents and lagomorphs) are poorly understood. We present a computational model in which random connectivity gives rise to orientation selectivity that matches experimental observations. The model predicts that mouse V1 neurons should exhibit intricate receptive fields in the two-dimensional spatial frequency domain, causing a shift in orientation preferences with spatial frequency. We find evidence for these features in mouse V1 using calcium imaging and intracellular whole-cell recordings.
Seminar Date & Time:
Notifications are sent to ELSC seminar mailing list, subscribe here.