The mammalian cerebellum is compartmentalized, both structurally and biochemically, into an array of parasagittal bands. In the adult rat, bands can be shown by immunocytochemical staining of a Purkinje cell subset with the monoclonal antibody antizebrin II. In contrast to the bands revealed by the zebrin II distribution, electrophysiological maps of tactile representations show an apparently quite different organization, a patchwork somatotopy of interwoven small receptive fields. We have compared zebrin II compartmentation with the distribution of vibrissal receptive fields in the dorsal face of lobule IXa. Nine adult rats were studied. Zebrin II immunocytochemistry revealed a zebrin II+ band at the midline (P1+) and three others (P2+, P3+, P4+) arrayed laterally, separated by the P1-, P2-, and P3- bands of unstained Purkinje cells. The only significant source of variability was that P3- was sometimes ill defined, making the P3+ and P4+ difficult to distinguish. Electrophysiological recording in the granular layer of lobule IXa identified two reproducible vibrissal receptive fields on each side of the midline (V1 and V2), with a third, more laterally, identified occasionally (V3). When receptive field maps were constructed and aligned with the zebrin II compartment maps from the same individuals, the V1 receptive field was centered on P1-, V2 on P2-, and V3 on P3-. However, the receptive fields typically extended beyond the P- band into the neighboring P+ to each side. Thus there is a simple, reproducible vibrissal receptive field organization in lobule IXa that bears a constant relationship to the Purkinje cell compartmentation revealed by zebrin II immunocytochemistry. The biochemical parcellation of the cortex may serve to organize the afferent and efferent projection topography and thus to align the sensory and motor maps in the cerebellum.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cne.903450103 | DOI Listing |
J Comput Neurosci
January 2025
Computational Brain Science Lab, Division of Computational Science and Technology, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, SE-100 44, Stockholm, Sweden.
This paper presents an in-depth theoretical analysis of the orientation selectivity properties of simple cells and complex cells, that can be well modelled by the generalized Gaussian derivative model for visual receptive fields, with the purely spatial component of the receptive fields determined by oriented affine Gaussian derivatives for different orders of spatial differentiation. A detailed mathematical analysis is presented for the three different cases of either: (i) purely spatial receptive fields, (ii) space-time separable spatio-temporal receptive fields and (iii) velocity-adapted spatio-temporal receptive fields. Closed-form theoretical expressions for the orientation selectivity curves for idealized models of simple and complex cells are derived for all these main cases, and it is shown that the orientation selectivity of the receptive fields becomes more narrow, as a scale parameter ratio , defined as the ratio between the scale parameters in the directions perpendicular to vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
January 2025
Department of Radiology, Yantaishan Hospital, Yantai, Shandong, China.
Diabetic retinopathy, a retinal disorder resulting from diabetes mellitus, is a prominent cause of visual degradation and loss among the global population. Therefore, the identification and classification of diabetic retinopathy are of utmost importance in the clinical diagnosis and therapy. Currently, these duties are extensively carried out by manual examination utilizing the human visual system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagn Reson Med
January 2025
Department 8.1 - Biomedical Magnetic Resonance, Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB), Braunschweig and Berlin, Germany.
Purpose: To develop a low-cost, high-performance, versatile, open-source console for low-field MRI applications that can integrate a multitude of different auxiliary sensors.
Methods: A new MR console was realized with four transmission and eight reception channels. The interface cards for signal transmission and reception are installed in PCI Express slots, allowing console integration in a commercial PC rack.
Reading, face recognition, and navigation are supported by visuospatial computations in category-selective regions across ventral, lateral, and dorsal visual streams. However, the nature of visuospatial computations across streams and their development in adolescence remain unknown. Using fMRI and population receptive field (pRF) modeling in adolescents and adults, we estimate pRFs in high-level visual cortex and determine their development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrief monocular deprivation during a developmental critical period, but not thereafter, alters the receptive field properties (tuning) of neurons in visual cortex, but the characteristics of neural circuitry that permit this experience-dependent plasticity are largely unknown. We performed repeated calcium imaging at neuronal resolution to track the tuning properties of populations of excitatory layer 2/3 neurons in mouse visual cortex during or after the critical period, as well as in mutant mice that sustain critical-period plasticity as adults. The instability of tuning for populations of neurons was greater in juvenile mice and adult mutant mice.
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