Adaptive interactions in the visual pathway
Nicholas A. Lesica and Garrett B. Stanley
Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences
Harvard University
In a natural setting, the mean luminance and contrast of the visual
world are constantly changing and multiple adaptive mechanisms are
concurrently active. These adaptive mechanisms play an essential part
in the neural encoding scheme by increasing the rate of information
transmission, differential sensitivity, and signal to noise ratio.
While visual adaptation has been studied for many years, the
interactive effects of the different mechanisms have not
been characterized. Extracellular recordings of responses to random
stimuli were made from retinal ganglion cells and visual cortex in
anesthetized rodents and primates. Initially, either mean luminance or
contrast was held fixed, while the other feature was varied.
The adaptive phenomena observed during these trials are in agreement
with previous studies. An increase in contrast resulted in a decrease
in the peak of the temporal receptive field to between 50% and
90% of its initial value over a time course of 10-15 seconds.
Similar results were observed for changes in mean luminance.
In order to investigate the interactive effects of mean luminance and
contrast adaptation, responses to stimuli where both features were
varied simultaneously were recorded. Preliminary results indicate that
increasing mean luminance has a multiplicative effect on contrast
adaptation in the visual cortex, i.e. increasing mean luminance increases
the percent change in the peak of the temporal RF. Efforts are underway to
use these data to create a model of adaptive interaction where the gain of the
temporal receptive field is modulated by the mean luminance and contrast
of the stimulus. Such a model can be used to predict the neuronal firing
rate in response to more naturalistic stimuli with varying mean luminance
and contrast.