Adaptation to changes in higher-order stimulus statistics in the salamander retina

Tkačik G, Ghosh A, Schneidman E, Segev R. 2014. Adaptation to changes in higher-order stimulus statistics in the salamander retina. PLoS One. 9(1), e85841.

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Journal Article | Published | English

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Author
Tkacik, GasperISTA ; Ghosh, Anandamohan; Schneidman, Elad; Segev, Ronen
Department
Abstract
Adaptation in the retina is thought to optimize the encoding of natural light signals into sequences of spikes sent to the brain. While adaptive changes in retinal processing to the variations of the mean luminance level and second-order stimulus statistics have been documented before, no such measurements have been performed when higher-order moments of the light distribution change. We therefore measured the ganglion cell responses in the tiger salamander retina to controlled changes in the second (contrast), third (skew) and fourth (kurtosis) moments of the light intensity distribution of spatially uniform temporally independent stimuli. The skew and kurtosis of the stimuli were chosen to cover the range observed in natural scenes. We quantified adaptation in ganglion cells by studying linear-nonlinear models that capture well the retinal encoding properties across all stimuli. We found that the encoding properties of retinal ganglion cells change only marginally when higher-order statistics change, compared to the changes observed in response to the variation in contrast. By analyzing optimal coding in LN-type models, we showed that neurons can maintain a high information rate without large dynamic adaptation to changes in skew or kurtosis. This is because, for uncorrelated stimuli, spatio-temporal summation within the receptive field averages away non-gaussian aspects of the light intensity distribution.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2014-01-21
Journal Title
PLoS One
Acknowledgement
This work was supported by The Israel Science Foundation and The Human Frontiers Science Program. We thank the referees for helping significantly improve this paper. We also thank Vijay Balasubramanian, Kristina Simmons, and Jason Prentice for stimulating discussions. GT wishes to thank the faculty and students of the “Methods in Computational Neuroscience” course at Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole.
Volume
9
Issue
1
Article Number
e85841
IST-REx-ID

Cite this

Tkačik G, Ghosh A, Schneidman E, Segev R. Adaptation to changes in higher-order stimulus statistics in the salamander retina. PLoS One. 2014;9(1). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0085841
Tkačik, G., Ghosh, A., Schneidman, E., & Segev, R. (2014). Adaptation to changes in higher-order stimulus statistics in the salamander retina. PLoS One. Public Library of Science. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085841
Tkačik, Gašper, Anandamohan Ghosh, Elad Schneidman, and Ronen Segev. “Adaptation to Changes in Higher-Order Stimulus Statistics in the Salamander Retina.” PLoS One. Public Library of Science, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085841.
G. Tkačik, A. Ghosh, E. Schneidman, and R. Segev, “Adaptation to changes in higher-order stimulus statistics in the salamander retina,” PLoS One, vol. 9, no. 1. Public Library of Science, 2014.
Tkačik G, Ghosh A, Schneidman E, Segev R. 2014. Adaptation to changes in higher-order stimulus statistics in the salamander retina. PLoS One. 9(1), e85841.
Tkačik, Gašper, et al. “Adaptation to Changes in Higher-Order Stimulus Statistics in the Salamander Retina.” PLoS One, vol. 9, no. 1, e85841, Public Library of Science, 2014, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0085841.
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