TY - JOUR
T1 - Coding schemes in the archerfish optic tectum
AU - Reichenthal, Adam
AU - Ben-Tov, Mor
AU - Segev, Ronen
N1 - Funding Information: We are thankful to Gustavo Glusman for technical assistance and to Ehud Vinepinsky for helpful discussions. We gratefully acknowledge financial support from the Israel Science Foundation (grant No. 211/15), and the Helmsley Charitable Trust through the Agricultural, Biological and Cognitive Robotics Initiative of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and the United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation (BSF) (grant No. 2011058). Publisher Copyright: © 2018 Reichenthal, Ben-Tov and Segev.
PY - 2018/3/6
Y1 - 2018/3/6
N2 - Many studies have yielded valuable knowledge on the early visual systembut it is biased since the studies have focused on terrestrial mammals alone. Here, to better account for visual systems in different environments and animal classes, we studied the structure of early visual processing in the archerfish which harnesses its extreme visual ability to hunt by shooting water jets at prey hanging on vegetation above the water. Thus, the archerfish provides a unique opportunity to study visual processing in a vertebrate which is an expert vision-guided predator with a very different brain structure than mammals. The receptive field structures in the archerfish (both sexes) optic tectum, the main visual processing region in the fish brain, were measured and linear non-linear cascades were used to analyze their properties. The findings indicate that the spatial receptive field structures lie on a continuum between circular and elliptical shapes. In addition, the cells’ functional properties display a richness of response characteristics, since many cells could be captured by more than a single linear filter. Finally, the non-linear response functions that link linear filters and neuronal responses were found to be similar to the non-linear functions of models that describe terrestrial mammalian single cell activity. Overall our results help to better understand the early visual processing system across vertebrates.
AB - Many studies have yielded valuable knowledge on the early visual systembut it is biased since the studies have focused on terrestrial mammals alone. Here, to better account for visual systems in different environments and animal classes, we studied the structure of early visual processing in the archerfish which harnesses its extreme visual ability to hunt by shooting water jets at prey hanging on vegetation above the water. Thus, the archerfish provides a unique opportunity to study visual processing in a vertebrate which is an expert vision-guided predator with a very different brain structure than mammals. The receptive field structures in the archerfish (both sexes) optic tectum, the main visual processing region in the fish brain, were measured and linear non-linear cascades were used to analyze their properties. The findings indicate that the spatial receptive field structures lie on a continuum between circular and elliptical shapes. In addition, the cells’ functional properties display a richness of response characteristics, since many cells could be captured by more than a single linear filter. Finally, the non-linear response functions that link linear filters and neuronal responses were found to be similar to the non-linear functions of models that describe terrestrial mammalian single cell activity. Overall our results help to better understand the early visual processing system across vertebrates.
KW - Linear-nonlinear models
KW - Optic tectum
KW - Receptive field
KW - Spike-triggered covariance
KW - White noise analysis
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85043569455&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fncir.2018.00018
DO - https://doi.org/10.3389/fncir.2018.00018
M3 - Article
SN - 1662-5110
VL - 12
JO - Frontiers in Neural Circuits
JF - Frontiers in Neural Circuits
M1 - 18
ER -