Journal article
Spatial phase sensitivity of complex cells in primary visual cortex depends on stimulus contrast
H Meffin, MA Hietanen, SL Cloherty, MR Ibbotson
Journal of Neurophysiology | AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC | Published : 2015
Abstract
Neurons in primary visual cortex are classified as simple, which are phase sensitive, or complex, which are significantly less phase sensitive. Previously, we have used drifting gratings to show that the phase sensitivity of complex cells increases at low contrast and after contrast adaptation while that of simple cells remains the same at all contrasts (Cloherty SL, Ibbotson MR. J Neurophysiol 113: 434–444, 2015; Crowder NA, van Kleef J, Dreher B, Ibbotson MR. J Neurophysiol 98: 1155–1166, 2007; van Kleef JP, Cloherty SL, Ibbotson MR. J Physiol 588: 3457–3470, 2010). However, drifting gratings confound the influence of spatial and temporal summation, so here we have stimulated complex cells..
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Awarded by Victorian Lions Foundation
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Vision Science (CE0561903), Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Integrative Brain Function (CE140100007), the National Health and Medical Research Council (GNT0525459), the Eirene Lucas Foundation, the Rebecca L. Cooper Medical Research Foundation, and the Victorian Lions Foundation.