A survey of spiking activity reveals a functional hierarchy of mouse corticothalamic visual areas
Abstract
The mammalian visual system, from retina to neocortex, has been extensively studied at both anatomical and functional levels. Anatomy indicates the cortico-thalamic system is hierarchical, but characterization of cellular-level functional interactions across multiple levels of this hierarchy is lacking, partially due to the challenge of simultaneously recording activity across numerous regions. Here, we describe a large, open dataset (part of the Allen Brain Observatory) that surveys spiking from units in six cortical and two thalamic regions responding to a battery of visual stimuli. Using spike cross-correlation analysis, we find that inter-area functional connectivity mirrors the anatomical hierarchy from the Allen Mouse Brain Connectivity Atlas. Classical functional measures of hierarchy, including visual response latency, receptive field size, phase-locking to a drifting grating stimulus, and autocorrelation timescale are all correlated with the anatomical hierarchy. Moreover, recordings during a visual task support the behavioral relevance of hierarchical processing. Overall, this dataset and the hierarchy we describe provide a foundation for understanding coding and dynamics in the mouse cortico-thalamic visual system.
Footnotes
↵6 Co-first authors
↵7 Co-senior authors
https://portal.brain-map.org/explore/circuits/visual-coding-neuropixels
Subject Area
- Biochemistry (12988)
- Bioengineering (9865)
- Bioinformatics (31624)
- Biophysics (16315)
- Cancer Biology (13388)
- Cell Biology (19071)
- Clinical Trials (138)
- Developmental Biology (10327)
- Ecology (15338)
- Epidemiology (2067)
- Evolutionary Biology (19592)
- Genetics (12995)
- Genomics (17966)
- Immunology (13083)
- Microbiology (30581)
- Molecular Biology (12761)
- Neuroscience (66730)
- Paleontology (490)
- Pathology (2065)
- Pharmacology and Toxicology (3554)
- Physiology (5543)
- Plant Biology (11429)
- Synthetic Biology (3183)
- Systems Biology (7843)
- Zoology (1773)