Journal article

Dynamic contrast change produces rapid gain control in visual cortex

NA Crowder, MA Hietanen, NSC Price, CWG Clifford, MR Ibbotson

Journal of Physiology | WILEY-BLACKWELL | Published : 2008

Abstract

During normal vision, objects moving in the environment, our own body movements and our eye movements ensure that the receptive fields of visual neurons are being presented with continually changing contrasts. Thus, the visual input during normal behaviour differs from the type of stimuli traditionally used to study contrast coding, which are presented in a step-like manner with abrupt changes in contrast followed by prolonged exposure to a constant stimulus. The abrupt changes in contrast typically elicit brief periods of intense firing with low variability called onset transients. Onset transients provide the visual system with a powerful and reliable cue that the visual input has changed...

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council


Awarded by Australian Research Council Centre for Excellence in Vision Science


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was supported by grants to M. R. I. and C. W. G. C. from the National Health and Medical Research Council (224263), to M. R. I. from the Australian Research Council Centre for Excellence in Vision Science (CE0561903), and to N. A. C. from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.