Publications by authors named "N Brackbill"

Article Synopsis
  • The study challenges the traditional view of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) in the retina functioning mainly through simple center-surround spatial filtering, revealing instead a much higher functional diversity in primate RGC types, particularly in macaques and humans.
  • Researchers identified 18-27 functional RGC types in primates, along with surprising non-classical receptive field structures and distinct responses to visual stimuli like natural movies.
  • These findings suggest that these diverse RGC types have specialized roles in vision rather than just proportioning visual information at varying spatial scales.
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Fixational eye movements alter the number and timing of spikes transmitted from the retina to the brain, but whether these changes enhance or degrade the retinal signal is unclear. To quantify this, we developed a Bayesian method for reconstructing natural images from the recorded spikes of hundreds of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) in the macaque retina (male), combining a likelihood model for RGC light responses with the natural image prior implicitly embedded in an artificial neural network optimized for denoising. The method matched or surpassed the performance of previous reconstruction algorithms, and provides an interpretable framework for characterizing the retinal signal.

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Linear-nonlinear (LN) cascade models provide a simple way to capture retinal ganglion cell (RGC) responses to artificial stimuli such as white noise, but their ability to model responses to natural images is limited. Recently, convolutional neural network (CNN) models have been shown to produce light response predictions that were substantially more accurate than those of a LN model. However, this modeling approach has not yet been applied to responses of macaque or human RGCs to natural images.

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Identifying neuronal cell types and their biophysical properties based on their extracellular electrical features is a major challenge for experimental neuroscience and the development of high-resolution brain-machine interfaces. One example is identification of retinal ganglion cell (RGC) types and their visual response properties, which is fundamental for developing future electronic implants that can restore vision. The electrical image (EI) of a RGC, or the mean spatio-temporal voltage footprint of its recorded spikes on a high-density electrode array, contains substantial information about its anatomical, morphological, and functional properties.

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Fixational eye movements alter the number and timing of spikes transmitted from the retina to the brain, but whether these changes enhance or degrade the retinal signal is unclear. To quantify this, we developed a Bayesian method for reconstructing natural images from the recorded spikes of hundreds of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) in the macaque retina (male), combining a likelihood model for RGC light responses with the natural image prior implicitly embedded in an artificial neural network optimized for denoising. The method matched or surpassed the performance of previous reconstruction algorithms, and provides an interpretable framework for characterizing the retinal signal.

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