Can Retinal Ganglion Cell Dipoles Seed Iso-Orientation Domains in the Visual Cortex?

2014 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Can Retinal Ganglion Cell Dipoles Seed Iso-Orientation Domains in the Visual Cortex?​
Schottdorf, M. ; Eglen, S. J.; Wolf, F.   & Keil, W. ​ (2014) 
PLoS ONE9(1) art. e86139​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0086139 

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Authors
Schottdorf, Manuel ; Eglen, Stephen J.; Wolf, Fred ; Keil, Wolfgang 
Abstract
It has been argued that the emergence of roughly periodic orientation preference maps (OPMs) in the primary visual cortex (V1) of carnivores and primates can be explained by a so-called statistical connectivity model. This model assumes that input to V1 neurons is dominated by feed-forward projections originating from a small set of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). The typical spacing between adjacent cortical orientation columns preferring the same orientation then arises via Moiré-Interference between hexagonal ON/OFF RGC mosaics. While this Moiré-Interference critically depends on long-range hexagonal order within the RGC mosaics, a recent statistical analysis of RGC receptive field positions found no evidence for such long-range positional order. Hexagonal order may be only one of several ways to obtain spatially repetitive OPMs in the statistical connectivity model. Here, we investigate a more general requirement on the spatial structure of RGC mosaics that can seed the emergence of spatially repetitive cortical OPMs, namely that angular correlations between so-called RGC dipoles exhibit a spatial structure similar to that of OPM autocorrelation functions. Both in cat beta cell mosaics as well as primate parasol receptive field mosaics we find that RGC dipole angles are spatially uncorrelated. To help assess the level of these correlations, we introduce a novel point process that generates mosaics with realistic nearest neighbor statistics and a tunable degree of spatial correlations of dipole angles. Using this process, we show that given the size of available data sets, the presence of even weak angular correlations in the data is very unlikely. We conclude that the layout of ON/OFF ganglion cell mosaics lacks the spatial structure necessary to seed iso-orientation domains in the primary visual cortex.
Issue Date
2014
Journal
PLoS ONE 
Organization
Fakultät für Physik 
ISSN
1932-6203
Language
English

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