Applying Super-Resolution and Tomography Concepts to Identify Receptive Field Subunits in the Retina
2024 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.
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Applying Super-Resolution and Tomography Concepts to Identify Receptive Field Subunits in the Retina
Krüppel, S.; Khani, M. H.; Schreyer, H. M.; Sridhar, S.; Ramakrishna, V.; Zapp, S. J. & Mietsch, M. et al. (2024)
PLoS Computational Biology, 20(9) art. e1012370. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012370
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Details
- Authors
- Krüppel, Steffen; Khani, Mohammad H.; Schreyer, Helene M.; Sridhar, Shashwat; Ramakrishna, Varsha; Zapp, Sören J.; Mietsch, Matthias; Karamanlis, Dimokratis; Gollisch, Tim
- Abstract
- Spatially nonlinear stimulus integration by retinal ganglion cells lies at the heart of various computations performed by the retina. It arises from the nonlinear transmission of signals that ganglion cells receive from bipolar cells, which thereby constitute functional subunits within a ganglion cell’s receptive field. Inferring these subunits from recorded ganglion cell activity promises a new avenue for studying the functional architecture of the retina. This calls for efficient methods, which leave sufficient experimental time to leverage the acquired knowledge for further investigating identified subunits. Here, we combine concepts from super-resolution microscopy and computed tomography and introduce super-resolved tomographic reconstruction (STR) as a technique to efficiently stimulate and locate receptive field subunits. Simulations demonstrate that this approach can reliably identify subunits across a wide range of model variations, and application in recordings of primate parasol ganglion cells validates the experimental feasibility. STR can potentially reveal comprehensive subunit layouts within only a few tens of minutes of recording time, making it ideal for online analysis and closed-loop investigations of receptive field substructure in retina recordings.
- Issue Date
- 2024
- Journal
- PLoS Computational Biology
- Project
- SFB 1456 | Cluster B | B05: Inference of functional networks in the neuronal circuit of the retina from large-scale spike-train recordings
SFB 1456: Mathematik des Experiments: Die Herausforderung indirekter Messungen in den Naturwissenschaften - eISSN
- 1553-7358
- Language
- English
- Publication Funding
- Open-Access-Publikationsfonds 2024
- Sponsor
- HORIZON EUROPE European Research Council http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100019180
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
Göttinger Graduiertenschule für Neurowissenschaften, Biophysik und Molekulare Biowissenschaften http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100004939