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J Neurophysiol 98: 2285-2296, 2007. First published June 27, 2007; doi:10.1152/jn.01342.2006
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Contribution of Individual Retinal Ganglion Cell Responses to Velocity and Acceleration Encoding

Andreas Thiel1, Martin Greschner1,3, Christian W. Eurich2, Josef Ammermüller1 and Jutta Kretzberg1

1Department of Biology, Carl von Ossietzky University Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany; and 2Theoretical Neurophysics, University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany; and 3Systems Neuroscience Laboratory, The Salk Institute, La Jolla, California

Submitted 20 December 2006; accepted in final form 25 June 2007

We investigate the capability of turtle retinal ganglion cell (RGC) ensembles to simultaneously encode multiple aspects of visual motion: speed, direction, and acceleration of moving patterns. Bayesian stimulus reconstruction reveals that the instantaneous firing rates of RGCs contain information about all of these stimulus properties. Stimulus velocity is mainly encoded by steady-state firing rates, whereas acceleration can be reconstructed from transient components in RGC activity induced by abrupt velocity changes. Therefore neurons in higher brain areas may in principle extract information about changing velocity from the instantaneous firing activity of RGCs, without the need to compare responses to present velocities to previous ones. However, reconstruction requires the estimation of a combined acceleration and velocity signal, indicating that RGC ensembles signal both properties simultaneously. In accordance with this conclusion, combined velocity/acceleration sensitivity enhances the similarity of artificial spike trains to experimental data by 50% compared with the case of pure velocity tuning. Decoding of motion direction in addition to speed and acceleration requires direction-sensitive cells, which generate higher firing rates for one of the motion directions and therefore show asymmetric velocity tuning. By dividing the entire ensemble of simultaneously recorded cells into one group of direction-sensitive cells and one group with symmetric tuning, we demonstrate that the population of direction-sensitive cells encodes a combination of motion speed, acceleration, and direction. However, estimation of velocity and acceleration is improved by including the larger group of RGC responses that are sensitive to speed but not to motion direction.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: A. Thiel, Department of Biology, Sensory Physiology Group, Carl von Ossietzky University Oldenburg, PO Box 2503, D-26111 Oldenburg, Germany (E-mail: andreas.thiel{at}uni-oldenburg.de)




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