Abstract

The retina is the entrance of the visual system. Although based on common biophysical principles, the dynamics of retinal neurons are quite different from their cortical counterparts, raising interesting problems for modellers. In this paper, I address some mathematically stated questions in this spirit, discussing, in particular: (1) How could lateral amacrine cell connectivity shape the spatio-temporal spike response of retinal ganglion cells? (2) How could spatio-temporal stimuli correlations and retinal network dynamics shape the spike train correlations at the output of the retina? These questions are addressed, first, introducing a mathematically tractable model of the layered retina, integrating amacrine cells’ lateral connectivity and piecewise linear rectification, allowing for computing the retinal ganglion cells receptive field together with the voltage and spike correlations of retinal ganglion cells resulting from the amacrine cells networks. Then, I review some recent results showing how the concept of spatio-temporal Gibbs distributions and linear response theory can be used to characterize the collective spike response to a spatio-temporal stimulus of a set of retinal ganglion cells, coupled via effective interactions corresponding to the amacrine cells network. On these bases, I briefly discuss several potential consequences of these results at the cortical level.

Highlights

  • Let us start with a very simple experiment

  • We label bipolar cells (B cells) with the index i = 1, . . . , NB and we model the Receptive Field (RF) of B cells by a convolution kernel, K Bi, such that the voltage of BCell i is stimulus-driven by the term: Vidrive (t) =

  • We have been able to write explicitly the RF of individual RG cells appearing in Equation (1) where the kernel depends explicitly on lateral connectivity

Read more

Summary

Objectives

One of the goals of this paper is to elicit reflections in this direction, grounded on mathematical developments fed by the recent progress in the knowledge of retina physiology and structure.

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call