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Oxyopias Archive 2001

Basic, clinical, or applied vision topics hosted by the UCB School of Optometry.

Current Oxyopias: Current-year Schedule

Past Oxyopias: Archived Oxyopias

 

December 14, 2001, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Dan Twelker
UC Berkeley (Vision Science graduate student presentation)
Host: Ian Bailey

Risk analysis in pterygium

Abstract

A pterygium is a nonmalignant lesion which invades the superficial cornea from the limbus. The name pterygium (plural: pterygia) comes from the Greek root pteros which means wing, because of its typical wing-shaped appearance. The prevalence of this condition varies from region to region, group to group. A recent population-based survey of Hispanics over the age of 40 years old in Southern Arizona reported a prevalence rate of 17%.

Clinical and epidemiological studies of pterygium have been limited, in part, due to a lack of evaluation techniques. We started our investigation by asking corneal specialists what they considered important in evaluating pterygium. Based on their responses, we have developed some methods for evaluating its signs and symptoms.

Information concerning risk factors for disease can aide in prevention efforts and guide future clinical and laboratory research. Using a case-control study design, which is an efficient epidemiological technique, we investigated risk factors for pterygium including anterior eye shape and increased exposure to ultraviolet radiation. We will present and discuss the results of this study.

 

11/30/01, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Michael Menz
UC Berkeley (Vision Science graduate student presentation)
Host: Russell DeValois

Functional connectivity of binocular disparity tuned neurons in cat striate cortex

Abstract

Binocular disparity tuned neurons in striate cortex are local disparity filters that are the first stage of image processing for stereopsis (i.e., depth perception from the disparate images of the two eyes). The spatial characteristics of their receptive field structure measured with single cell recordings using dense and sparse noise stimuli have been extensively studied. This study offers a more complete description of their function by studying their dynamics, alteration of their space-time receptive fields as a function of stimulus energy, and connectivity between disparity tuned neurons revealed through neural cross-correlation. In the hierarchical model information flows from LGN to simple to complex, so all three cell types were recorded from in the first two studies. In the dynamics study I show that disparity tuning becomes sharper with time (~50ms). The proposed mechanism that generates this temporal coarse-to-fine is a combination of feedforward and feedback. In the stimulus energy study, receptive fields are measured with both sparse and dense noise, and the shapes of the space-time receptive fields are compared. The results in cortex are not consistent with divisive-normalization, but there is evidence for some cortical gain control. In the neural cross-correlation study between disparity-tuned cells there is evidence consistent with disparity averaging. There are a few strong coarse-to-fine connections (i.e., lower frequency is pre-synaptic), and many weaker fine-to-coarse connections. The results of these studies support a generally hierarchical model with some disparity-specific feedback at the simple cell level, and pooling across spatial frequency where low frequencies have shorter latencies.

 

Tuesday, November 20, 2001, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Michael Herzog
Institute of Human Neurobiology, University of Bremen, Germany
Host: Stan Klein

New insights in feature binding and segmentation

Abstract

We characterize a class of spatio-temporal illusions with two complementary properties. Firstly, if a vernier stimulus is presented for a short time and followed immediately by a grating comprising a small number of straight bars, the grating is perceived as offset though it is not (feature inheritance). The illusory offset is inherited from the foregoing vernier which remains invisible. In a short time window features migrate from their original carriers. Secondly, presenting gratings with a larger number of elements can render the first stimulus and its features visible as a shine-through element. Subjects perceive two independent ``objects'' each carrying its own features. However, this illusion is sensitive to subtle changes of the spatio-temporal layout of the grating. Differences in temporal onsets of grating elements of 10ms and smaller, i.e. in the range of only a very few neuronal spikes, can switch perception and change performance dramatically. We speculate that segmentation processes, very sensitive to the individual timing of single grating elements, underlie these phenomena. Very simple models, employing a layer of excitatory and inhibitory interconnected neurons, can explain the results. Moreover, contextual modulation might also be explained by the same segmentation processes.

 

11/16/01, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Paul Gamlin
Professor Physiological Optics
Director, Neuroscience Graduate Program & Senior Scientist in the Univ Alabama Vision Science Research Center
Host: Cliff Schor

Neural control of vergence eye movements

Abstract

My laboratory has been studying the neural substrates for vergence eye movements. These studies have concentrated on investigating the roles played by specific cerebro-ponto-cerebellar pathways in the control of these eye movements. We have identified vergence-related pathways that are comparable to the pathways involved in the control of saccadic and smooth pursuit eye movements. More specifically, within the deep cerebellar nuclei and nucleus reticularis tegmenti pontis, we have identified neurons that are related either to the near-response or far-response (Gamlin and Clarke, 1995; Zhang and Gamlin, 1998). In addition, within the frontal eye field region of frontal cortex, we have not only characterized neurons related either to the far-response or near-response, but have also characterized neurons that are related to the sensorimotor transformations underlying these eye movements (Gamlin and Yoon, 2000).

Gamlin, P.D.R. and R.J. Clarke, J. Neurophysiol., 73:2115-2119, 1995.
Zhang, H and P.D.R. Gamlin, J. Neurophysiol., 79:1255-1269, 1998.
Gamlin, P.D.R. and K.Yoon, Nature, 407:1003-1007, 2000.

 

11/9/01, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Giorgio Ascoli
Head Computational Neuroanatomy Group, Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study & Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA
Host: Don Glaser, Jointly sponsored by Neurobiology

The algorthmic beauty of neurons (can we model dendritic morphology?)

Abstract

It is generally assumed that the variability of neuronal morphology affects the connectivity and the activity of the nervous system. Until now, only few attempts have been made to characterize dendritic shape in a complete and intuitive way. Typically, neuroanatomists describe neuronal structure by statistical summaries (intuitive but not complete) or sets of digital reconstructions (complete but not intuitive). We are adopting a third, intermediate level of description, consisting of stochastic algorithms designed to grow virtual neurons based on a set of measured parameters. If the simulated morphology is consistently and statistically indistinguishable from that of real neurons, the model can become a powerful source of intuition and hypotheses concerning the biophysical mechanisms underlying neuronal structure and development. Anatomically realistic virtual neurons can be also appropriately distributed in three dimension to reproduce the arrangement, orientation, density, and connectivity of real brain regions. Used in conjunction with more conventional computational neurobiology approaches (cable and compartmental simulations of cellular electrophysiology), these real scale anatomical models constitute a new generation of artificial neural networks for the systematic study of the structure-activity-function relationship in the nervous system.

 

Special Neuroscience Lecture
Thursday, November 8th, 3:00 pm, Beach Room, 3rd Floor Tolman Hall

Guy A. Orban
Professor, Laboratorium voor Neuro-en Psychofyiologie, KU Leuven Medical School.
Sponsored by the Henry H. Wheeler, Jr. Brain Imaging Center

Motion processing: from single cells to fMRI in human and awake monkey

Abstract

Human functional imaging has revealed a number of motion sensitive regions such as the MT/V5 complex, V3A and intraparietal regions. The relationship with motion selective regions defined in single cell studies based on direction selectivity, has remained unclear. With (contrast enhanced) fMRI in the awake monkey, one can compare imaging directly to single cell studies: motion sensitive regions include MT/V5, MSTv,FST,V2,V3, VIP, and also FEF. This strategy is now being extended to the processing of kinetic boundaries, which in humans activate the kinetic occipital (KO) region. In monkeys this may correspond to dorsal V4, although other regions are also involved: anterior intraparietal sulcus, MT/V5, MSTv, and TE. This latter is in agreement with single cell studies. Finally, single cell studies have implicated MT/V5 in the extraction of depth from motion. Both in humans and monkeys imaging has also implicated MT/V5 in this function, along with anterior intraparietal regions, V3, V4 and FST.

 

10/31/01, 5 pm, 489 Minor Hall

Carol Lakkis
School of Optometry,UC Berkeley
Host:Ed Revelli

Tear exchange and corneal health

Abstract

Pseudomonas aeruginosa (P. aeruginosa) is one of the most common causative agents of contact lens-related corneal infections which pose a serious threat to vision. Whilst the pathogenesis of contact lens-related infections remains unclear, it is hypothesized that stagnation of the tear film underneath the contact lens plays a role. This presentation will provide an overview of investigations into the role of tear exchange in protecting the cornea from bacteria using in vitro model systems. Particular attention will be focussed on epithelial cell interactions with cytotoxic P. aeruginosa strains which do not require an epithelial defect to cause cell death.

 

10/26/01, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Donald MacLeoz

Department of Psychology, UCSD
Host: Ted Cohn

Does the retinal mosaic limit visual resolution?

Abstract

Vision isn't perfect, in the sense that very fine details are not resolved in perception. Where, and why, during visual processing are the details lost? Experiments with inteferometric resolution targets show that preretinal optical losses account for only part of the loss. Filtering and sampling by the retinal mosaic, and post-receptoral neural filtering, may account for the rest. I consider evidence about each of these in turn. First, certain phenomena due to non-linearity in early neural responses show that the photoreceptor mosaic can resolve and represent test gratings of very high spatial frequency, up to about twice the perceptual resolution limit. Filtering by the retinal mosaic is not important. A barely resolvable grating target has a period of about twice the foveal cone spacing, allowing adjacent photoreceptors to be in register with light and dark bars. This has been viewed as a Nyquist limit situation, where higher spatial frequencies could not be represented veridically but would be perceived only as aliases. The perceived luminance profile across such a grating may, however, be based on output from many rows of cones, as the extent of cortical receptive fields implies; this would make the effective sampling density and the sampling limit many times greater than the observed resolution limit. We find that spatial integration does indeed range, minimally, over several rows of cones. The retinal mosaic sampling limit on grating resolution, given the observed extent of spatial integration along the bars, is therefore hundreds of cycles per degree. So resolution is not limited by sampling by the photoreceptor mosaic. These results contradict the standard view that the retinal mosaic limits resolution. Instead, the limit (for interferometric targets) may reflect a lack of cortical receptive fields sensitive to high spatial frequencies, the pass-band of the neural spatial filter being roughly matched to that of the eye's optics (for external targets). Neural spatial filtering appears to be distributed over a range of stages in visual processing: retina, geniculo-striate projection and cortex. Supported by NIH grant EY-01711

 

Thursday, 10/18/01, 1 PM, 101 Life Science Addition

Edward Callaway
Salk Institute (MCB hosted seminar)

Cell Type Specificity of Neural Circuits in Visual Cortex.

 

Tuesday 10/16/01, 4:00 PM, 3105 Tolman (Beach room)

Robbie Jacobs
Center for Visual Science, University of Rochester
(Psychology Department hosted seminar)

Learning to see in three dimensions

Abstract

Why is seeing the world in three dimensions so easy? We believe that this ease is due to the fact that the visual world is highly redundant; there are many cues to perceptual properties such as depth and shape. However, combining information from multiple cues in an effective manner is non-trivial. We argue that people must learn their cue combination strategies on the basis of experience. Three experiments are reported whose results suggest that observers can indeed adapt their cue combination strategies in an experience-dependent manner, though their learning abilities seem to be biased in an interesting way. Next, we address the question of whether or not observers can adapt their visual cue combination strategies on the basis of consistencies between visual and haptic (touch) percepts. Berkeley (1709),Piaget (1952), and many others speculated that people calibrate their interpretations of visual cues on the basis of their motor interactions with objects in the world. Despite the intuitive appeal of this hypothesis, it has never been adequately tested. Using a novel virtual reality environment, we have conducted three experiments whose results suggest that observers adapt their visual cue combination strategies based on correlations between visual and haptic percepts.

 

10/12/01, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Dennis Levi
Dean, School of Optometry, UC Berkeley
Host: Tony Adams

Are there high level deficits in strabismic amblyopia?

Abstract

Abnormal visual development in strabismic amblyopia is known to have drastic effects on visual perception and on the properties of neurons in primary visual cortex (V1). We set out to test the notion that amblyopia may also have consequences for higher visual areas by asking humans with amblyopia to count briefly presented features. Our results show that strabismic amblyopes cannot count accurately with their amblyopic eye - they markedly underestimate the number of features. This is not due to low level considerations (blur, visibility, and crowding, undersampling or topographical jitter) because they also underestimate the number of missing features. Rather, the deficits of counting in strabismic amblyopes reflect a higher level limitation in the number of features that the amblyopic visual system can individuate.

 

Friday, October 5, 2001 noon, 489 Minor Hall

John Michon, MD
Clinical Faculty, Dept. Ophthalmology
Stanford University School Medicine & Research Fellow, Section on Biomedical Informatics, SUMS
Host: Tony Adams

Genomics and the Eye: A Research Agenda

Abstract

The tools of computation and information technology have had a substantial impact on biomedicine and promise to add even further to our understanding of biological phenomena in the future. Databases of gene and protein sequence, structure, function and interaction are the raw material by which we can elucidate the molecular physiology of disease.

I will discuss the application of these tools to ophthalmology and visual science, and suggest a research agenda that might allow this new knowledge to be rapidly incorporated into clinical practice.

 

9/26/01, 5:00 pm, 489 Minor Hall

Nancy McNamara, PhD
Department of Anatomy, UCSF
Host: Suzanne Fleizig

Innate defense against corneal infection

Abstract

In their quest to colonize and infect host tissues, bacteria cause considerable damage to their hosts. The mucosal epithelium is often the first line of defense against potential pathogens and uses mechanisms similar to those used by lymphocytes. An advantage mucosal cells have over lymphocytes is the speed at which they can react to pathogens since their pathogen-recognition strategy is more general. Furthermore, eradication of the impending pathogen directly by mucosal epithelial cells enables the host to avoid lymphocyte-mediated inflammation and its associated morbidity. There is convincing evidence that the epithelial cell can detect the presence of pathogens and respond by altering gene expression. Epithelial gene products aimed at killing bacteria include lysozyme, lactoferrin, and defensins. Another important innate defense molecule is mucin. In the eye, mucin effectively augments the barrier between host and bacteria while bacteria-laden mucus is cleared by blinking of the eyelid. Our goal is to understand the intracellular signaling and gene regulation mechanisms that mediate the production of both epithelial-derived antimicrobials and mucin in response to clinically important insults.

 

9/21/01, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Michael Webster
Dept of Psychology, University of Nevada, Reno
Host: Marty Banks

Neural adjustments to image blur

Abstract

Blur is an important and salient dimension of image quality, and one that the visual system continuously adjusts to. Accommodative changes of the eye's optics are thought to be the primary mechanism by which the visual system responds to blur, but there is evidence that acuity and contrast sensitivity are also affected by neural adjustments to blur. We examined these adjustments by measuring how the perception of blur depends on the blur of images that observers are exposed to. Briefly viewing blurred or sharpened images leads to pronounced changes in the perceived focus of images. These adaptation effects do not depend on the global amplitude spectra of the images, and instead appear to adjust to the explicit feature of blur. Such adjustments may play an important role in calibrating the responses of cortical mechanisms, to provide a form of perceptual constancy for the expected spatial structure of scenes. Similar changes in perceived focus are also induced by presenting images within blurred or sharpened surrounds, suggesting that these adjustments also calibrate variations in spatial sensitivity across the visual field. These adaptation and induction effects have important implications for understanding normal spatial vision and how it varies with refractive errors or during development.

 

9/7/01, noon, 101 LSA

Matteo Carandini
Institute of Neuroinformatics, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology & University of Zurich, Switzerland (MCB hosted seminar)

Suppression without inhibition in primary visual cortex

Abstract

The responses of neurons in the primary visual cortex to an optimal stimulus can be suppressed by the simultaneous presence of other visual stimuli. This suppression arises from mechanism that divides the responses of the neurons by a measure of stimulus strength. The input to this divisive mechanism is traditionally thought to arise from pools of cortical neurons operating through feedback inhibition. New results from my laboratory, however, suggest that the mechanism is feed-forward, and may be local to the synapses connecting the thalamus to the cortex.

 

Friday Aug 10, 2001, noon, Room 100 Minor Hall

Heinrich Buelthoff
Director of Max-Planck-Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Tuebingen, Germany
Host: Marty Banks

Object and Face Recognition in Man and Machines

Abstract

Theories of visual object recognition must solve the problem of recognizing 3D objects given that perceivers only receive 2D patterns of light on their retinae. Recent findings from human psychophysics, neurophysiology and machine vision provide converging evidence for image-based models in which objects are represented as collections of viewpoint specific local features. This approach is contrasted with structural-description models in which objects are represented as configurations of 3D volumes or parts.

I will report on recognition experiments with familiar, unfamiliar and dynamic objects and cross-modal transfer between visual and haptic recognition. All these experiments show strong viewpoint effects and speak in favor of an image-based representation of objects in which the physical similarity can account for recognition with small viewpoint changes. Recently, together with Guy Wallis we started to look at the importance of temporal similarity on the representation and recognition of objects. Temporal similarity can link many views to one object identify, because different views of objects are usually seen in close succession. To test this hypothesis subjects were presented sequences of unfamiliar faces in which the identity of the face changed as the head rotated. The subjects showed a tendency to treat the views as if they were of the same person. Our results counter the proposal that object views are recognized simply on the basis of objective, structural components. Instead, they suggest that we are continuously associating views of objects to support later recognition, and that we do so not only on the basis of their physical similarity, but also their correlated appearance in time. The application of this image-based approach in computer graphics and computer vision will be described.

 

Wednesday, July 11, 2001, noon, Room 100 Minor Hall

Dae-Shik Kim
Assistant Professor
Center for Magnetic Resonance Research & Graduate Program in Neuroscience
University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis
Host: Ralph Freeman

Steps towards neuroscientifc MRI

Abstract

The rapid progress of BOLD-based fMRI has raised the hope that the functional architecture of the living brain could be visualized non-invasively at high resolution, thus avoiding many limitations of the more traditional brain mapping techniques. However, many pivotal questions remain to be answered before MRI can be applied for addressing systems and developmental neuroscientific questions. To list only the most crucial ones: a) What is the neural correlate of functional fMRI? b) What is the ultimate spatial and temporal resolution of fMRI? And c) How does the balance of excitatory and inhibitory neural events influence the fMRI activity pattern? I will present recent results from my laboratory, suggesting that the questions of neural correlates and spatial specificity might be within the reach of a tentative solution. Furthermore, I will present some initial studies demonstrating that Diffusion Tensor based MRI can be used to provide axonal fiber reconstructions in vivo, thus yielding genuine in vivo neuroanatomy.

 

Friday, June 22, 2001, noon, 101 Minor Hall

Elise Héon MD, FRCS (C)
Associate Professor & Director of Residents Research
Department of Ophthalmology, Toronto Western Hospital
Host: John Flannery

A molecular perspective on glaucoma: practical implications

Abstract

Despite therapeutic advances, glaucoma remains a leading cause of permanent blindness worldwide. A major difficulty in management of this condition resides in early diagnosis before the condition leads to irreversible optic nerve and visual function damage. The genetic approach to the study of glaucoma has currently identified at least eighteen glaucoma-related loci. The identification of an increasing list of glaucoma-related genes allows us to now identify a number of those at risk of developing the disease and direct them towards earlier sight-saving therapy. The identification of more genes and the elucidation of the molecular pathway involved will likely lead to the development of novel therapies and sight saving approaches. This talk will discuss the implications of molecular testing in pediatric and adult onset glaucoma.

 

Friday, June 1st, 2001, noon, 100 Minor Hall

Dimitri Chernyak, PhD
UCB School of Optometry
Host: Lawrence Stark

Scene recognition by a sequential knowledge-based information gathering algorithm based on human eye movements

Abstract

Eye movements are an important aspect of human visual behavior. The temporal and space-variant nature of sampling a visual scene requires frequent attentional gaze shifts, saccades, to fixate onto different parts of an image. Experimental evidence suggests that fixations are often directed towards the most informative regions in the visual scene. We develop a model and its simulation that can select such regions based on prior knowledge of similar scenes. Having representations of scene categories as a probabilistic combination of hypothetical objects, i.e., prototypical regions with certain properties, it is possible to assess the likely contribution of each image region to the successive recognition process. Using conditional probabilities for each region given the scene category, the model can then predict its informative value and initiate a sequential spatial information-gathering algorithm analogous to an eye movement saccade to a new fixation. This algorithm establishes the most likely scene category for a given image.

 

Friday, May 18, 2001, noon, Room 100 Minor Hall

Stacey Choi
UC Berkeley

The relationship between the Stiles-Crawford effect and myopia

 

Friday, May 11, 2001, noon, Room 5101 in Tolman Hall (Rock lecture)

Walter Gerbino
University of Trieste, Italy

Amodal completion: Another microcosm of visual science

Abstract

Phenomenology, visual ecology, psychophysics, physiology, computational modelling, and more are captured by amodal presence of objects. As recent research shows, amodal completion is ubiquitous and complex. Its ubiquity is grounded in the ecology of occlusion and in the spatiotemporal fragmentation of the optical input. Its complexity depends on the action of various processes, acting at different levels of visual perception.

 

Thursday, May 10, 2001, noon, 100 Minor Hall

Günter Niemeyer, MD

Director, Neurophysiology Laboratory & Clinical ERG laboratory
Department of Ophthalmology, University Hospital, CH8091 Zürich Switzerland
Host: Sheldon Miller

Retinal research using the perfused mammalian eye

Abstract

The effort to isolate and maintain alive in vitro an intact mammalian eye is rewarded by the full control provided over the arterial input and exclusion of systemic regulatory or compensatory mechanisms. Electrical recording of typical light-evoked field potentials from retina and optic nerve can be complemented by single cell recording. Thus light-induced electrical activity reflects the function of the retinal pigment epithelium, of the layers of the retina and of the ganglion cells or their axons. Retinal function in vitro is documented by electrophysiological and morphological methods revealing subtle features of retinal information processing as well as optic nerve signals that approach - at threshold stimulus intensity - the human psychophysical threshold. Such sensitivity of third order retinal neurons is described for the first time.

This well controlled in vitro preparation has been used successfully for biophysical, metabolic and pharmacological studies. Examples are provided that demonstrate the marked sensibility of the rod system to changes in glucose supply. Moreover, histochemical identification of glycogen stores revealed labeling of the second and third order neurons subserving the rod system, in addition to labeling of Müller (glial) cells in the cat retina.

The glycogen content of the cat retina is augmented by prolonged anesthesia, largely depleted by ischemia after enucleation and enhanced by insulin.

Pharmacological experiments using agonists and antagonists of putative retinal neurotransmitters are summarized and outlined using the muscarinic cholinergic agonist QNB as an example. Actions and uptake of the neuromodulator adenosine are presented in detail, including inhibitory effects on physiologically characterized ganglion cells. Neuronal effects of adenosine are distinguished from those resulting from vasodilatation and from glycogenolysis induced by the neuromodulator.

To open the blood-retina barrier, a hyperosmotic challenge can be applied transiently. This process is monitored histochemically using FITC-albumin and with electrophy-siological parameters. Changes in vitreo-scleral resistance and in the amplitude of the EOG-light peak appear to reflect the open/closed status of the barrier.

This overview of the uses of the isolated perfused mammalian eye in retinal research concludes with a discussion of potential implications for clinically relevant topics.

 

Friday, April 20, 2001, noon, Room 489 Minor Hall

Yang Dan, PhD
UC Berkeley
Host: Ralph Freeman

Stimulus-timing-dependent plasticity in the visual cortex

Abstract

Relative timing of pre- and postsynaptic spikes on the order of milliseconds plays a critical role in activity-induced, long-term synaptic modification, but the functional significance of such synaptic plasticity in vivo is only beginning to be examined. Since the timing of visual stimuli can directly affect spike timing in visual neurons, it may play an important role in the plasticity of visual circuits. In this talk, I will present our recent studies on stimulus-timing-dependent plasticity of the response properties of cortical neurons in the orientation and space domain.

 

Monday, April 16, 2001, 1:00 pm, 489 Minor Hall

Judith Hirsch, PhD
Laboratory of Neurobiology, Rockefeller University, New York
Host: Yang Dan

Synaptic integration in the cat's visual cortex in vivo

Abstract

Each stage of striate cortical processing extracts new information about the visual environment. We explore the integrative capacity of the cortical circuit by studying its anatomical structure and the physiology of its component connections. Our approach is to combine the techniques of whole-cell recording and intracellular labeling with visual stimulation. This talk will focus on the synaptic integration of two basic features of the visual scene, stimulus orientation and movement.

At the first stage of cortical processing, in layer 4, neurons become to able resolve stimulus orientation and maintain this selectivity even as stimulus contrast increases. The push-pull model of orientation selectivity holds that the ability to detect stimulus angle is based on the layout of the simple receptive field, in whose adjacent subregions bright and dark stimuli evoke responses of the opposite sign. Ascending input from the thalamus is thought to provide the push, or excitation; a view our results support. The proposed substrate of the pull is a group of inhibitory simple cells. We have been able to identify such inhibitory neurons; as predicted, their receptive fields resembled those of excitatory simple cells. In addition, we found an unanticipated class of inhibitory cells that were neither simple nor orientation selective. These cells could help establish the contrast invariance of orientation tuning and other forms of gain control.

While cells at the first cortical stage respond vigorously to stationary stimuli, those at later stages do not. To ask if this difference in sensory response reflects laminar differences in synaptic physiology, we compared records from the thalamus, layer 4 and its postsynaptic target, layer 2+3. All cells in layer 4 transmitted the patterns of thalamic activity that static stimuli evoked. By contrast, at the second cortical stage in layer 2+3, postsynaptic responses to the stationary stimuli were brief and intermittent. Only richer stimuli such as those including motion had substantial effect. Thus, at the first cortical stage, a large investment is made to incorporate ascending input. After that, the effort made to transmit information is reduced unless stimuli meet new standards: the gate between layers 4 and 2+3 operates economically.

 

Friday, April 6, 2001, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Mark D'Esposito, MD
Professor Neuroscience and Psychology
Director, Henry H. Wheeler Jr. Brain Imaging Center
University of California at Berkeley
Host: Ralph Freeman

Functional MRI: Implications for neuroscience

Abstract

Initially, the advent of structural brain imaging paved the way for more precise testing of hypotheses regarding brain-behavior relationships. In recent years, functional neuroimaging, broadly defined as methods that provide data on brain activity, has further increased our ability to study the neural basis of behavior. One such method, functional MRI (fMRI) has recently emerged as an extremely powerful technique that affords excellent spatial and temporal resolution. After a brief review of the basic principles of fMRI, and the physiological factors that influence the resolution of this method, I will describe and critique a new class of imaging experimental designs called event-related fMRI. Event-related fMRI exploits the temporal resolution of fMRI by modeling fMRI signal changes associated with individual behavioral trials, or behavioral events within a trial, as opposed to blocks of behavioral trials. Thus, this new method has the potential to address a number of neuroscientific questions with a degree of inferential and statistical power not previously available.

 

Friday, March 23, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Ward M. Peterson, PhD
Inspire Pharmaceuticals
Host: Sheldon Miller

P2Y2 Receptor Agonists for Dry Eye and Retinal Detachment From Laboratory to Clinical Development

Abstract

Many ocular conditions result in fluid imbalance either on the ocular surface (dry eye) or within the subretinal space (retinal detachment). A pharmacological mechanism for restoring fluid homeostasis on the ocular surface or in the subretinal space could be therapeutically useful in the treatment of these conditions. Activation of P2Y2 receptors is coupled to fluid transport in many epithelia, including conjunctival epithelia and retinal pigment epithelium. Endogenous ligands for these receptors are extracellular ATP and UTP. However, rapid hydrolysis of extracellular ATP and UTP by nucleotidases limits their physiological activity. Hydrolysis-resistant agonists for P2Y2 receptors were therefore developed and tested both on the ocular surface and intravitreally. In animal models, these agonists stimulate conjunctival fluid and mucin secretion when administered on the ocular surface, and enhance subretinal fluid reabsorption across RPE when administered as an intravitreal injection. The efficacy profiles of these P2Y2 receptor agonists from preclinical studies warrant their development as clinical candidates for the treatment of a variety of ocular conditions comprising dry eye disease and retinal detachment.

 

Friday, March 9, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Michael Kubovy
Depart Psychology, University of Virginia
Host: Marty Banks

Perceptual organization and perceptual transformations

Abstract

After a discussion of perceptual emergent properties, I will talk about perceptual simplicity, with particular attention to Garner's and Palmer's ideas about the relation between simplicity and groups. Finally I will discuss the relation between the rich domain of the perception of patterns (as defined and classified by Gruenbaum and Shepard, in their book Tilings and Patterns) and the Gestalt laws of grouping.

 

Friday, March 2, 2001, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Jamie Mazer, PhD
Department of Psychology, UC Berkeley
Host: Ralph Freeman

Neuronal activity in extrastriate cortex during natural vision

Abstract

The activity of visual neurons in awake animals is typically studied by training animals to fixate a small visual target and then flashing or drifting bars and gratings in and around the classical receptive field. These types of experiments often ignore both the complex temporal dynamics of natural eye movements and the complex spatial statistics of natural scenes.

In order to better understand the operation of visual cortex during natural vision, we have examined the responses of both striate and extrastriate cortical neurons during performance of a free viewing visual search task using high resolution photographs natural scenes as stimuli. We simultaneously recorded single neuron activity and eye movements during performance of the visual search task and then used a novel reverse correlation method to compute linear spatiotemporal receptive fields (STRFs) for neurons in V1, V2 and V4.

Our data indicate that spatiotemporal receptive fields can be reliably estimated, at least up to area V4, during natural vision. In many, cases, but not all, natural vision STRFs are well correlated with tuning measured using bar and grating stimuli during fixation. This combination of reverse correlation and free viewing visual search provides a window allowing use to view the operating of the visual system during natural vision.

 

Wednesday, February 28, 2001 5pm 489 Minor Hall

Christopher Furmanski
Department of Psychology, UCLA
Host: Ralph Freeman

Models of vision: What fMRI of striate cortex can tell us about the mechanisms of perception

Abstract

The focus of my research is to understand the links between neural physiology and human perception. In this talk, I will present psychophysical and neuroimaging (fMRI) data that suggest neural responses in human primary visual cortex (V1) underlie some fundamental asymmetries in perception. A century of research indicates that human perception is better for horizontal and vertical stimuli than for stimuli at other, oblique orientations. My fMRI measurements of V1 revealed that cortical responses were smaller for foveal oblique gratings than for horizontal gratings, however, this difference diminished in the periphery. This pattern of results matched threshold measurements of contrast detection but differed from judgements of supra-threshold orientation identification. Such results support models of V1 that contain fewer units that prefer oblique orientations than prefer horizontal and vertical orientations. My current work further examines this link between detection performance and V1 activity. Here, extensive training was used to alter perceptual performance. Preliminary fMRI results indicate that increases in V1 responses for trained stimuli paralleled an orientation- and location-specific improvement found in post-training behavioral thresholds. Together, these results demonstrate that fMRI can serve as powerful tool for constraining models of the human visual system.

 

Monday, February 26, 2001, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Yves Frégnac
Unité de Neurosciences Intégratives et Computationnelles,
CNRS, Gif-sur-Yvette, France
Host: Ralph Freeman

Everything you wanted to know on shunting inhibition and orientation selectivity, but were afraid to ask

Abstract

A prevailing concept in the role of thalamocortical pathways in sensory processing is the dominant influence of feedforward connectivity. In the case of the mammalian visual system, it is well established that topographic maps, the organization of visual receptive fields in ON and OFF discharge zones, and possibly the genesis of orientation selectivity at the cortical level result from the strong imprint of the feedforward input. The spatial convergence of afferents from one relay to the next decides of the functional architecture of the target structure.

The aim of this talk is to examine challenging evidence - based on intracellular recordings, patch and sharp, in cat area 17 in vivo - which suggests that visual input evokes a transient shunting inhibitory signal, acting concomitantly with the excitatory drive. This shunting effect is observed for stimulus features that suppress spike activity (null-direction, cross-orientation), but also for the stimulus eliciting the strongest firing, which indicates that the primary visual cortex works more as an overdamped system rather than as a canonical amplifier.

It is classically accepted that the functional selectivity of cortical neurons to orientation results from the bias provided by the feedforward input. I will present current clamp and voltage clamp intracellular data in vivo, showing that similar orientation preference of cortical cells expressed at the spiking level can be produced through various orientation/direction dependent combinations of excitatory and inhibitory inputs (Monier et al, 2000). Our results suggest that canonical excitatory-inhibitory iso-oriented models are largely oversimplified, and that silent shunting inhibition expressed for non-preferred directions and/or orientations should play a critical computational role. We propose the existence of a functional map conformation process which tends to realign the orientation preference of a cortical cell with that dictated by its immediate neighborhood in the orientation map, irrespectively of the individual bias provided by the feedforward input.

Subthreshold depolarizations in area 17 cortical neurons in response to flashed bars can be evoked with onset latencies as early as 18-20 ms whereas the first spike occurrence is generally observed at much longer delays (>35 ms). Our intracellular studies also show the existence of an early shunt signal dominated by GABAa receptor activation often visible after the start of the initial postsynaptic depolarization (Borg-Graham et al, 1998). Thus a pause of several tens of ms delay exists between the earliest signs of cortical activation and the mean latency of the output V1 signal. Taken into account the slow propagation of visual activity along excitatory and inhibitory lateral connections (Bringuier et al, 1999), one may extrapolate that local inhibitory circuits put the cortical cells on hold, waiting for the contextual confirmation or invalidation of the relevance of the input by the rest of the network.

References
Borg-Graham, L. J., Monier, C. & Frégnac, Y. (1998). Visual input evokes transient and strong shunting inhibition in visual cortical neurons. Nature .393, 369-373.

Bringuier, V., Chavane, F., Glaeser, L. & Frégnac, Y. (1999). Horizontal propagation of visual activity in the synaptic integration field of area 17 neurons. Science .283, 695-699.

Chavane, F., Monier, C., Baudot, P., Borg-Graham, L.J. and Frégnac, Y. (2000). Early inhibitory control of spiking evoked activity in area 17 neurons. ANA New Orleans, USA: 1968.

Chavane, F., Monier, C., Bringuier, V., Baudot, P., Borg-Graham, L., Lorenceau, J. and Frégnac, Y. (2000). The visual cortical association field: a Gestalt concept or a physiological entity? J. Physiol. (Paris). 94, 333-342.

Frégnac, Y. & Bringuier, V. (1996). Spatio-temporal dynamics of synaptic integration in cat visual cortical receptive fields. In Brain Theory: Biological Basis and Computational Theory of Vision, eds. Aertsen, A. & Braitenberg, V., pp. 143-199. Springer-Verlag, Amsterdam.

 

Friday, February 23, 2001, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Geraint Rees, PhD
Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London
Host: Stan Klein

Parietal Cortex and the Neural Correlates of Consciousness

Abstract

The simplicity with which we open our eyes and consciously experience the world belies the complexity of the underlying neural mechanisms, which remain incompletely understood. One currently popular view is that neurons in the ventral visual pathway alone mediate conscious visual perception. This presentation will directly challenge such a notion, by suggesting a crucial and often neglected contribution from other cortical structures. Empirical data from our neuroimaging studies of visual extinction, binocular rivalry, inattentional and change blindness converge with other data to suggest an association of superior parietal cortex activity with conscious visual experience. While activity in ventral visual cortex measured by fMRI may be necessary for visual awareness, it appears to be insufficient without a contribution from parietal and prefrontal cortex. The physiological and psychological nature of this contribution will be discussed in the light of contemporary theories of visual attention. A comprehensive understanding of the neural correlates of consciousness, particularly in parietal cortex, will be incomplete without an appreciation of the anatomical and functional homologies between monkey and human. Our recent work shows a direct quantitative relationship between single cell activity in monkeys and fMRI measurements in humans, and the potential future contribution of neuroimaging technologies to understanding such inter-species relationships will be discussed.

 

Friday, February 16, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Jennifer LaVail, PhD
University of California San Francisco
Host: Bridgette Cowell

Herpes simplex virus infections of the cornea

 

Friday, February 9, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Josef F. Bille, PhD
Kirchhoff-Institut for Physics, University of Heidelberg,
Heidelberg, Germany
Host: Lawrence Stark

Perfect vision: Wavefront-technology, adaptive optics and custom ablations

Abstract

Measurements of wavefront of light reflected from the retina of the human eye can be used to determine optical aberrations of the human eye for large pupils. An instrument based on the Hartmann-Shack principle was developed. The wavefront is refracted by a microlens array and detected by a CCD camera. In first clinical studies human volunteer eyes and preoperative and postoperative refractive surgical patient eyes have been examined. An adaptive optical closed loop system has been devised for preoperative simulation of refractive outcomes of aberration free refractive surgical procedures.

In a first clinical study, custom ablation treatments using the Wave-ScanTM wavefront technology and the VISX STAR S3 ActivTrakTM excimer laser system were performed in Heidelberg, Germany. Based on the patient's WavePrint data, the laser created a PreVue TM lens for each eye. This lens allowed the patients to preview their corrected vision before the surgery took place. A preliminary analysis of the study results shows that 100% of the patients achieved 20/20 or better vision. Of those patients, 89% achieved vision better than 20/20 and 44% achieved 20/16 or better vision at the one month followup.

 

Thursday February 8, 7 pm, Location TBA

Jane Gwiazda
Center for Myopia Research, New England College of Optometry, Boston
Host: Christine Wildsoet

Lens treatment options for myopia control

 

Wednesday, February 7, 5 pm, 489 Minor Hall

Susana Marcos
Institute of Optics (CSIC), Madrid, Spain
Host: Christine Wildsoet

Aberrations in the normal eye and how they change after refractive surgery

Abstract

The eye is not a perfect optical system, as it suffers from imperfections known as optical aberrations. This has been known for more than a century. However, there has been recently a renewed interest in studying the ocular aberrations, stimulated by the development of new instrumentation and by refractive surgery. LASIK surgery has become a popular alternative to treat refractive errors, and future developments aim at correcting not only conventional refractive errors but higher order aberrations. It then becomes crucial to understand the aberrations in the normal eye and how current techniques modify the aberration pattern of those eyes. In this seminar, I will talk about the aberrations in the normal eye: how they change with accommodation, with wavelength, with myopia, and with age, as measured using a spatially resolved refractometer, and laser ray tracing. I will also discuss how these aberrations (particularly spherical aberration) increase following standard myopic LASIK surgery, and how this relates to visual performance.

 

Friday, February 2, noon,489 Minor Hall

Christoph Zetzsche
University of Munich, Germany
Host: Stanley Klein

Higher-order statistics of natural images and nonlinear operations in the visual cortex

Abstract

The independence of local frequency components is a key feature of current vision models and of recent statistical optimization schemes (independent component analysis - ICA). Our measurements indicate that the hypothesis of statistical independence of the responses of linear frequency-selective mechanisms to natural scenes is substantially violated. The exploitation of the remaining statistical dependencies requires specific nonlinear interactions, and these turn out to be closely related to cortical gain control and to extra-classical receptive field properties of cortical neurons.

 

Wednesday January 31, 5 pm, Room 489 Minor Hall

Peter Lennie
Center for Neural Science, New York University, New York
Host: Russel DeValois

Sensitivity regulation in striate cortex

Abstract

Normal eye-movements ensure that the visual world is seen episodically, as a series of often stationary images. Neurons in striate cortex give distinctive transient responses to stationary images. The transients have high contrast sensitivity, high response gain, and disproportionately low variability. These factors together make the onset transient an information-rich component of response, such that the detectability and discriminability of stationary gratings grows rapidly to an early peak, within 150 msec of the onset of the response in most neurons. The initial high discharge rate that decays rapidly, and the change of contrast sensitivity over time, seem to be associated with a rapid adaptation that in complex cells is pattern-specific. This adaptation improves the discriminability of patterns resembling a neuron's preferred pattern, and reduces the redundancy of representation.

 

Friday, January 26, 2001, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Juan I. Korenbrot
Department of Physiology, School of Medicine
University of California at San Francisco
Host: John Flannery

Retinal development and repair: teleost fish as an accessible model

Abstract

In the new age of molecular physiology, long standing questions from the old age remain unanswered. The new tools, however, offer new possibilities. Retinal development can be described to have two principal and distinct phases: birth and maturation. Molecular insights are only beginning to be discovered as to birth, and maturation is understood even less. We have embarked on a research plan to define and better understand the role of functional cell-cell interactions in the developmental maturation of the retina. To this end, we have developed a novel experimental model: a physiologically active tissue slice of the developing fish retina. The seminar will present anatomical and electrophysiological results of studies using this preparation in which we investigated events associated with retinal development and injury repair.

 

Friday, January 19, 2001, noon, 489 Minor Hall

Thai D. Nguyen, PhD
Glaucoma Research, Department of Ophthalmology, UCSF
Host: Chris Wildsoet

Glaucoma and the TIGR gene

Abstract

Applications of genetic mapping and molecular biology research in the past decade have been instrumental to important discoveries of candidate genes for glaucoma. There are over ten genetic loci suggested for different forms of the disease and the number is on the rise. Candidate genes for some of these loci have been identified and more of them are expected to be achieved in the future with rapid pace along with the recent near completion of the human genome project. Among these candidates, the TIGR (for Trabecular meshwork Inducible Glucocorticoid Response) gene originally cloned by our laboratories (1,2) (also known as MYOC, GLC1A) is the most studied gene for glaucoma, due to its association with two most known form of the disease including adult and juvenile onset glaucoma (3). Interest in the TIGR gene has rapidly expanded in the recent years and involved various aspects of glaucoma research ranging from mutations, structure and functions to help provide a possible explanation for glaucoma pathogenesis.

In brief, the gene has been reported to have different forms including the cellular and extracellular forms; there are over 30 mutations associating with glaucoma identified within its structural domain; the gene is expressed in various tissues and by various conditions including steroid hormone, oxidative and shear stress. In our investigations of the TIGR gene in the trabecular meshwork cell system, we have found the gene to have a number of attractive features that could help to explain the outflow resistance commonly seen in glaucoma. In addition to its genetic aspect, there are also evidences to suggest that the gene could potentially involve in other glaucoma etiologies including hormone, environment, and possibly aging factors. In this seminar, we review the discovery of the TIGR gene and describe its biochemical, cellular properties and its functions that we uncovered in the trabecular meshwork cells. Other properties of the TIGR gene recently emerged from various glaucoma research laboratories and its potential applications for glaucoma diagnosis/prognosis as well as therapy are also discussed.

Reference
1) Polansky,J.R., Kurtz,R.M., Fauss,D.J., Kim,R.Y. and Bloom,E. (1991). In vitro correlates of glucocorticoid effects on intraocular pressure. In Krieglstein, G.K.(ed.), Glaucoma Update IV. Springer-Verlag, Berlin Heidelberg, 20-29.
2) Nguyen TD; Chen P; Huang WD; Chen H; Johnson D; Polansky JR. Gene structure and properties of TIGR, an olfactomedin-related glycoprotein cloned from glucocorticoid-induced trabecular meshwork cells. Jr. of Biol. Chem., 1998 Mar 13, 273(11):6341-50.
3) Stone EM; Fingert JH; Alward WLM; Nguyen TD; Polansky JR; Sunden SLF; Nishimura D; Clark AF; Nystuen A; Nichols BE; et al. Identification of a gene that causes primary open angle glaucoma. Science, 1997 Jan 31, 275(5300):668-70.

 

Wednesday, January 17, Noon, 489 Minor Hall

Fred A Miles
Chief of the Section on Oculomotor Control
Laboratory of Sensorimotor Research, NEI Intramural program, Bethesda MD
Host: Clifton Schor

(This presentation is co-sponsored by the Minerva foundation and School of Optometry)

Population Coding of Vergence Eye Movements in the MST Area of Cortex.

Abstract

Single unit discharges were recorded in the medial superior temporal area (MST) of 5 behaving monkeys. Disparity tuning curves, resembling the derivative of a Gaussian, were derived from the dependence of initial vergence responses on the magnitude of step disparity stimuli. Tuning curves were sorted into four groups based on their shapes that had features in common with four classes of disparity-selective neurons in striate cortex. The magnitude, direction and time course of the initial vergence velocity responses associated with disparity steps applied to large patterns are all encoded in the summed activity of disparity-sensitive cells in MST. We suggest that this population activity in MST plays an active role in the generation of vergence eye movements with short latencies.

 

Tuesday January 16, 2001, 5:00 PM, 145 Dwinelle Hall

Semir Zeki
Professor of Neurobiology
University College, London

The Platonic Ideal in Art and Neurology

Cosponsored by the Departments of the History of Art, Philosophy and Art Practice, as well as The School of Optometry and The Minerva Foundation.

Reference:
Zeki, Semir
Inner vision : an exploration of art and the brain
Semir Zeki. Oxford; New York : Oxford University Press, c1999.
UCB Main N71 .Z45 1999

 


 
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