Abstract

Eye-specific thalamic inputs converge in the primary visual cortex (V1) and form the basis of binocular vision. For normal binocular perceptions, such as depth and stereopsis, binocularly matched orientation preference between the two eyes is required. A critical period of binocular matching of orientation preference in mice during normal development is reported in literature. Using a reaction diffusion model we present the development of RF and orientation selectivity in mouse V1 and investigate the binocular orientation preference matching during the critical period. At the onset of the critical period the preferred orientations of the modeled cells are mostly mismatched in the two eyes and the mismatch decreases and reaches levels reported in juvenile mouse by the end of the critical period. At the end of critical period 39% of cells in binocular zone in our model cortex is orientation selective. In literature around 40% cortical cells are reported as orientation selective in mouse V1. The starting and the closing time for critical period determine the orientation preference alignment between the two eyes and orientation tuning in cortical cells. The absence of near neighbor interaction among cortical cells during the development of thalamo-cortical wiring causes a salt and pepper organization in the orientation preference map in mice. It also results in much lower % of orientation selective cells in mice as compared to ferrets and cats having organized orientation maps with pinwheels.

Highlights

  • In the visual system, signals from the left and the right eyes first converge in the primary visual cortex, V1

  • Development of orientation selectivity in both monocular and binocular regions are modeled for mice in this paper

  • Our model captures the diversity in receptive filed (RF) and orientation preferences in local cell population as reported in Bonin et al (2011)

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Summary

Introduction

Signals from the left and the right eyes first converge in the primary visual cortex, V1. For normal binocular perceptions, such as depth and stereopsis, binocularly matched orientation preference between the two eyes is required. Little is known about the developmental process for binocularly matched orientation preference between the two eyes. Though cortical cells mostly have binocularly matched orientation (OR) preference between the two eyes in cats and monkeys, cells with interocular difference in preferred OR (IDPO) are reported. Blakemore et al (1972) have reported a range a of ±15◦ (S = 6–9◦) IDPOs in cat. The binocularly matched orientation preference is established in mice after eye opening. Study on mice provides a unique opportunity to investigate development of binocularly matched orientation preference between the two eyes (Wang et al, 2010; Sarnaik et al, 2014) during normal development

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