Scientific

Photo of Ron Schuchard

State of the Science for Neurorecovery/Neuroprotection as well as Visual Restoration Products for Retinal Degenerative Conditions

Abstract – Recent FDA cleared/approved devices and biologics as well as current clinical trials in these types of products which promised improved vision by neurorecovery or at least slowing of the vision loss progression with neuroprotection including:  1) Spark Therapeutics LUXTURNA gene therapy; and 2) Okuvision OkuStim Electrical Stimulation Therapy.  In addition, retinal and cortical prosthetics have promised restored vision by substituting mechanisms in the visual system.  This presentation will provide a review of the actual results of these types of products and the challenges that would need to be overcome for these products to provide the promised improvement in vision. www.envisionus.com/  

VPEM Journal Club Meeting

Natela will be presenting the following paper: Aspinall et al., 2014, British J. Ophthalmology,”Gaze and pupil changes during navigation in age-related macular degeneration”. Abstract:  Background The central visual field is particularly affected in age-related macular degeneration (AMD), and this can impinge on a variety of functional tasks, including navigation, which can affect activities of daily living. It has been difficult to assess navigational function under standardised conditions. The aim of this study is to examine gaze function and pupil diameter during navigation in patients with AMD. Methods This study was designed as an observational case–control investigation. 34 patients with AMD and 23 controls were recruited. We simulated a walking journey using video projection and monitored patients using automated eye tracking. Visual acuity, fixation count, fixation duration and pupil diameter were recorded while subjective measurements included recorded voice comments. Results The pupil diameters were significantly greater in the AMD group compared with the control group in both easy and difficult segments of navigation (p=0.002). Fixation counts were significantly higher in the AMD group during difficult segments of navigation (p=0.001). The differences in both pupil diameter and fixation count correlated with subject visual acuity. Conclusions Fixation count is a marker of difficult navigational environments in patients with AMD. The combination of video projection and eye tracking to assess visual navigation function is a useful clinical tool and an adjunct to current investigation tools in AMD intervention studies providing objective clinical measures under standardised settings.

Photo of Joo-Hyun Song

How does action training affect perception and cognition?

Abstract – Our daily experience can be thought of as a sequence of acquiring perceptual input to make decisions, then planning, and executing appropriate actions. Hence, examining the influence of perception on action flows logically. Investigating the inverse may seem unusual however; in a series of studies, we have accumulated evidence, supporting co-dependence between action and perception. First, we demonstrated that simultaneous easy-action preparation or even prior action training could enhance sensitivity to an action-relevant low-level visual property, such as orientation. This newly-observed modulation of visual perception by action fluency cannot be explained by the traditional sequence of information processing stages. In addition, we discovered that improvement of motor timing enhances the sensitivity of time perception, even for implicit timing patterns inherent to a complex motor task. We interpret this as evidence for a shared temporal mechanism between perception and movement, regardless of the rhythmicity or complexity of the motor tasks. Furthermore, we found that learning a visuomotor rotation, but not actions without a rotation component, facilitated response time on a subsequent mental rotation task. This result suggests that visuomotor learning can enhance mental processes through common components. Taken together, our work supports a close interplay between the action system and perception, which highlights the necessity of an integrated approach to understand our adaptive behavior in a complex environment. The integrated approach would allow us to investigate a range of broader questions that would have not been possible by studying the motor system alone or vision alone. https://www.brown.edu/academics/cognitive-linguistic-psychological-sciences/people/faculty/joo-hyun-song

hubel_wiesel_bimodal

Society For Neuroscience

Introduction. Two key issues in the cortical mapping of receptive field (RF) size are its population composition and its scaling with level in the visual hierarchy. Although it is well-established neurophysiologically that RF size spans only about a factor of 4 at any particular eccentricity (e.g. Gattass, Sousa & Rosa, 1987, J Comp Neurol), most computational models of visual processing operate on the assumption that there are channels of all sizes throughout the visual field. Conversely, in human vision, both electrophysiological (Tyler & Apkarian, 1981, New York Acad Sci) and psychophysical (Kontsevich & Tyler, 2015, J Vision) evidence suggests that there are two subpopulations of RF sizes in each local region of cortex, separated by about a factor of 3 in size (e.g., peaking at 3 arcmin and 9 arcmin in the fovea), with the sizes scaling with eccentricity. Methods. An analysis of extrastriate receptive field (RF) data in macaque areas V2, V3 and V3A published posthumously in Hubel et al. (2013, Cereb Cortex), together with the original publication of V1 RF data (Hubel & Wiesel, 1974, J Comp Neurol), prompted a reanalysis of the RF sizes in the cortical (eccentricity-scaled) coordinate frame for the present study of RF size as a function of eccentricity and level in the cortical visual hierarchy. Results. The distribution of eccentricity-scaled RF sizes was significantly bimodal in each cortical area, fitting a model of two discrete populations of RF sizes separated by about a factor of three. The size ranges for both sub-populations increased by about a log unit from V1 to V3A (reaching sizes of roughly 0.5 and 1.5 deg in foveal V3A, for example). Conclusion. Thus, the reanalysis of these data pose a challenge to neural and computational models of extended object processing beyond their respective discrete sizes, implying that the local processing of spatial structure derives from the comparison of only two size signals, and that the mechanism for processing elongated or large stimuli in central vision must be deferred to the later stages of the visual hierarchy. Figure:. Histograms of the distributions of receptive-field area scaled to eccentricity for V1 (from Hubel & Wiesel, 1974) and for V2, V3 and V3A (from Hubel, Wiesel and Conway, 2015). The histograms are fitted by four models of the distributions, single-component models (upper row) and two-component models (lower row).  Each model is fitted in the alternative forms of Gaussian components (green curves) and sech function components (red curves). For the two-component firs, the separate components for the sech model are plotted as dashed curves. To characterize the data for each cortical area, histograms were constructed of the receptive field area scaled with eccentricity. To determine whether the distributions were significantly bimodal, the data were fitted by single- and two-component models of the distributions.   Because the data had noticeably long tails, the data were fitted by sech models in addition to the traditional Gaussian model, where the sech is defined as 1/(ex+ e-x) and the Gaussian by e-(x2). The two-component models give substantially better fits than the single-component models. The two functions give similar fits for the single-component models, but the sech function gives significantly better fits than the Gaussian for the two-component models for all four cortical areas.   This analysis therefore provides strong support to the hypothesis that the receptive field areas conform to two distinct sub-populations both at each eccentricity and in each cortical area.  The distribution peaks are separated by about 0.5 log units, or a factor of 3 in linear receptive field size in each of the four cortical areas.   1.    Hubel DH, Wiesel TN, Yeagle EM, Lafer-Sousa R, Conway BR (2013) Binocular stereoscopy in visual areas V-2, V-3, and V-3A of the macaque monkey. Cerebral Cortex. 25(4):959-71. 2.    Hubel DH, Wiesel TN(1974) Sequence regularity and geometry of orientation columns in the monkey striate cortex. Journal of Comparative Neurology. 158(3):267-93.

VPEM Journal Club Meeting

Preeti will be presenting the following paper: Weiss et al., 2002, Nat. Neurosci. “Motion illusions as optimal percepts.” Abstract: The pattern of local image velocities on the retina encodes important environmental information. Although humans are generally able to extract this information, they can easily be deceived into see- ing incorrect velocities. We show that these ‘illusions’ arise naturally in a system that attempts to estimate local image velocity. We formulated a model of visual motion perception using standard estimation theory, under the assumptions that (i) there is noise in the initial measurements and (ii) slower motions are more likely to occur than faster ones. We found that specific instantiation of such a velocity estimator can account for a wide variety of psychophysical phenomena.

VPEM Journal Club Meeting

Christopher Tyler will be presenting the following paper: Dokka et al., 2015, J. Neurosci. “Multisensory integration of visual and vestibular signals improves heading discrimination in the presence of a moving object.” Abstract: Humans and animals are fairly accurate in judging their direction of self-motion (i.e., heading) from optic flow when moving through a stationary environment. However, an object moving independently in the world alters the optic flow field and may bias heading percep- tion if the visual system cannot dissociate object motion from self-motion. We investigated whether adding vestibular self-motion signals to optic flow enhances the accuracy of heading judgments in the presence of a moving object. Macaque monkeys were trained to report their heading (leftward or rightward relative to straight-forward) when self-motion was specified by vestibular, visual, or com- bined visual-vestibular signals, while viewing a display in which an object moved independently in the (virtual) world. The moving object induced significant biases in perceived heading when self-motion was signaled by either visual or vestibular cues alone. However, this bias was greatly reduced when visual and vestibular cues together signaled self-motion. In addition, multisensory heading discrimination thresholds measured in the presence of a moving object were largely consistent with the predictions of an optimal cue integration strategy. These findings demonstrate that multisensory cues facilitate the perceptual dissociation of self-motion and object motion, consistent with computational work that suggests that an appropriate decoding of multisensory visual-vestibular neurons can estimate heading while discounting the effects of object motion.

VPEM Journal Club Meeting

Brent Parsons will discuss reverse phi motion, smooth pursuit, and drawing patterns on your own retina: Portron & Lorenceau, 2017, Journal of Vision: “Sustained smooth pursuit eye movements with eye-induced reverse-phi motion” Background: Lorenceau, 2012, Current Bio: “Cursive Writing with Smooth Pursuit Eye Movements”

VPEM Journal Club Meeting

Audrey and Santani will summarize the 3rd and 4th of their selections from ICPV: Pierre-Michel Bernier: Movement suppresses visual signals (Benazet et al., 2016) Rufin vanRullen: EEG alpha reflects predictive coding (Alamia & vanRullen, 2018)

Ethics Seminar on Rigor and Reproducibility

Abstract: As part of the SKERI postdoctoral fellowship program and as recipients of the NEI Institutional postdoctoral grant, we are required to have quarterly Ethics seminars. NEI requires all potential mentors and all postdocs to take active part in these seminars. Lunch will be provided.