A Laboratory for Neural Computation Publication
In Journal of Neuroscience, 1998, 18 , 4325-4334.
Translation-Invariant Orientation Tuning in Visual
`Complex' Cells Could Derive from Intradendritic Computations
Bartlett W. Mel ,
Biomedical Engineering Department,
USC
Daniel L. Ruderman
, Salk Institute
Kevin A. Archie
, Neuroscience Program,
USC
ABSTRACT
Hubel and Wiesel (1962) first distinguished ``simple'' from
``complex'' cells in visual cortex, and proposed a processing
hierarchy in which rows of LGN cells are pooled to drive
oriented simple cell subunits, which are pooled in turn to
drive complex cells. Though parsimonious and highly
influential, the pure hierarchical model has since been
challenged by results indicating many complex cells receive
excitatory monosynaptic input from LGN cells, or do not depend
on simple cell input. Alternative accounts for complex cell
orientation tuning remain scant, however, and the function of
monosynaptic LGN contacts onto complex cell dendrites remains
unknown. We have used a biophysically detailed compartmental
model to investigate whether nonlinear integration of LGN
synaptic inputs within the dendrites of individual pyramidal
cells could contribute to complex-cell receptive field
structure. We show that an isolated cortical neuron with
``active'' dendrites, driven only by excitatory inputs from
overlapping ON- and OFF-center LGN subfields, can produce clear
phase-invariant orientation tuning---a hallmark response
characteristic of a complex cell. The tuning is shown to
depend critically upon both the spatial arrangement of LGN
synaptic contacts across the complex cell dendritic tree,
established by a Hebbian developmental principle, and on the
physiological efficacy of excitatory voltage-dependent
dendritic ion channels. We conclude that unoriented LGN inputs
to a complex cell could contribute in a significant way to its
orientation tuning, acting in concert with oriented inputs to
the same cell provided by simple cells or other complex cells.
As such, our model provides a novel, experimentally testable
hypothesis regarding the basis of orientation tuning in the
complex cell population, and more generally, underscores the
potential importance of nonlinear intradendritic subunit
processing in cortical neurophysiology.
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Many of the NEURON files used for this work are available
here.