Neurons in visual cortex exhibit a remarkable selectivity for certain
features of the visual stimulus--a selectivity that must reflect an
underlying specificity in the organization of their synaptic connections.
Much of the anatomical specificity in cortical circuitry depends on the
precise arrangement of intracortical axon arbors. For example, intrinsic
axon arbors are responsible for interconnecting selected subsets of neurons
that reside in different cortical layers; they are also responsible for
selectively linking columns of neurons that share similar response
properties. The proposed experiments focus on another dimension of
intrinsic axonal connections which, while less conspicuous, may be no less
important: the arrangement of axonal connections with respect to the map of
visual space. The goal is to determine whether specificity in the
topographic arrangement of intracortical axons, like laminar and modular
specificity, plays a role in shaping the visual responses of cortical
neurons. Previous studies have shown that individual cortical neurons
often give rise to axon arbors that are elongated across the cortical
surface, extending farther and giving rise to more terminals along one axis
of the map of visual space than along the others. A combination of
anatomical and physiological methods will be used to: (1) examine the
relaxation between this anisotropy in connections and the preference of
cortical neurons for oriented edges and (2) examine how this anisotropy
might contribute to the response properties of cortical neurons. These
experiments should provide new insights into the rules that govern the
organization of local circuits in visual cortex--information that is
crucial for understanding the neural basis of visual perception.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
Scandentiabehavioral /social science research tagbrain mappingcell typedevelopmental neurobiologyhistologyintercellular connectionneural information processingneuronal transportsingle cell analysistissue /cell preparationvisual cortexvisual pathwaysvisual perceptionvisual stimulus
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