TRANSFER CHARACTERISTICS OF lateral geniculate nucleus X-NEURONS IN THE
CAT: EFFECTS OF SPATIAL FREQUENCY AND CONTRAST.
Cheng, Han, Yuzo M. Chino, Earl L. Smith III, Junji Hamamoto, Kazuyuki
Yoshida.
College of Optometry, University of Houston, 4901 Calhoun Blvd, Houston, TX
77204-6052.
APStracts 2:0213N, 1995.
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
(1) The dependence of signal transfer in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN)
on stimulus spatial frequency and contrast was investigated by comparing
responses of individual X-cells with their direct retinal inputs. (2) We used
extracellular single-cell recording methods to isolate action potentials (LGN)
and S potentials (SP) from individual neurons in layers A and A 1 of
anesthetized and paralyzed cats. The stimuli were drifting sinusoidal gratings
which were presented at each neuron's preferred orientation. The effects of
stimulus spatial frequency and contrast on retinogeniculate signal transfer
were determined by comparing the amplitude of the fundamental Fourier
responses measured for a cellOs action potentials (LGN) and its retinal input
(SP) and calculating the transfer ratio (LGN amplitude / SP amplitude) for
each stimulus condition. (3) In all units, the LGN response amplitude was
lower than that of its retinal input regardless of stimulus spatial frequency.
The mean (+/- SE) transfer ratio measured at the peak spatial frequency for
individual units was 0.56 +/- 0.03. For the majority of X-LGN neurons,
however, the efficiency of signal transfer varied considerably with stimulus
spatial frequency. The average transfer ratio increased monotonically from
0.08 c/d to near the high cut-off spatial frequency. (4) The effects of
stimulus contrast on geniculate signal transfer were far more complex than
previously reported and varied substantially between individual neurons. At
low stimulus contrasts (below 10%), where all units exhibited linear response
characteristics, only one-third of our sample showed a monotonic decrease in
transfer ratio with increasing stimulus contrast. The remaining two-thirds
exhibited either proportionately greater signal transfer for higher stimulus
contrasts or signal transfer remained relatively unchanged with increasing
stimulus contrasts. When stimulus contrasts exceeded 10%, where response
amplitude began to saturate, the transfer ratio was relatively constant in all
units and independent of stimulus contrast. (5) Our results demonstrate that
signal transfer from retina to visual cortex is regulated by LGN neurons in a
stimulus dependent manner, which appears to reflect the complex interactions
between local membrane mechanisms and extraretinal inputs.
Received 2 February 1995; accepted in final form 17 July 1995.
APS Manuscript Number J67-5.
Article publication pending J. Neurophysiol.
ISSN 1080-4757 Copyright 1995 The American Physiological Society.
Published in APStracts on 10 August 1995.