Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre...

31
Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada The Representation of Visual Salience in the Superior Colliculus June 9 th , 2012

Transcript of Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre...

Page 1: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Brian WhiteCentre for Neuroscience StudiesQueen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada

The Representation of Visual Salience in the Superior Colliculus

June 9th, 2012

Page 2: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Oculomotor Circuit

SCs = Superior Colliculus Superficial Layers

SCi = Superior Colliculus Intermediate Layers

THALAMUS

SCs

SCi

BRAINSTEM

FRONTALPARIETAL

OCCIPITAL

RETINA

Page 3: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

AimDirectly test whether the SC shows evidence of a

sensory-driven saliency mapi.e., higher-order visual process associated with

computation of visual salience

which takes into account feature-specific spatial interactions between stimuli across the entire visual field

Page 4: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Experiment 1

We compared visually evoked SC activation across three task irrelevant stimulus conditions single item, popout, conjunction

Monkey’s task was to saccade to goal-related stimulus that ran orthogonal to the RF, where the salient item appeared

Page 5: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Task

Page 6: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

(i) Single item cond(ii) Popout cond(iii) Conjunction cond

Page 7: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

(i) Single item cond(ii) Popout cond(iii) Conjunction cond

Page 8: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

(i) Single item cond(ii) Popout cond(iii) Conjunction cond

Page 9: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Abrupt onset Saccade

Page 10: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Abrupt onset Saccade

+

singleitemin RF

Page 11: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

+

Abrupt onset Saccade

singleitemin RF

Page 12: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

+

Abrupt onset Saccade

singleitem at

anti-location

Page 13: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Abrupt onset Saccade

+popout

stimulusin RF

Page 14: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Abrupt onset Saccade

+

popoutstimulusat anti-location

Page 15: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Abrupt onset Saccade

+conjunction

condition

Page 16: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

0-1mm (SCs)N=14

SC Depth

1-3mm(SCi) N=9

Popout in RFPopout anti-location ConjunctionSingle item in RFSingle item anti-location

* *

Page 17: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

SCs SCi

Single item in RFSingle item anti-locPopout item in RFPopout item anti-locConjunction

Local field potentials (LFP)

Page 18: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Experiment 2Same as Exp 1 except the RF was dragged over

salient item via a pursuit eye movement.

Same three conditions single item, popout, conjunction

Page 19: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Pursuit

Page 20: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

N=19SCs

neurons

Single itemin RF

Page 21: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

N=19SCs

neurons

Single itemin RF

Page 22: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

N=19SCs

neurons

Single item at anti location

Page 23: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

N=19SCs

neurons

Popout stimulusin RF

Page 24: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

N=19SCs

neurons

Popout stimulusat anti location

Page 25: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

N=19SCs

neurons

Conjunction condition

Page 26: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

N=14SCi

neurons

Page 27: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

SummarySC neurons (and LFPs) showed greater visual activation for

popout relative to conjunction and anti-popout conditions, even though the stimuli were task irrelevant.

This difference emerged after the initial visual transient. A similar pattern was observed previously in V4 (Burrows & Moore, 2009),

and LIP (Arcizet, Mirpour & Bisley 2011).

This difference was greatest for neurons within the dorsal most 1mm of the SC surface (i.e., the superficial visual layers) where the predominant inputs arise from visual cortex, not

parietal/frontal cortices.

Page 28: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Oculomotor Circuit

SCs = Superior Colliculus Superficial Layers

SCi = Superior Colliculus Intermediate Layers

FRONTALPARIETAL

BRAINSTEM

OCCIPITAL

THALAMUS

SCs

SCi

Page 29: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Oculomotor Circuit

SCs = Superior Colliculus Superficial Layers

SCi = Superior Colliculus Intermediate Layers

FRONTALPARIETAL

BRAINSTEM

OCCIPITAL

THALAMUS

saliency

SCs

SCi

Page 30: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Oculomotor Circuit

SCs = Superior Colliculus Superficial Layers

SCi = Superior Colliculus Intermediate Layers

FRONTALPARIETAL

BRAINSTEM

OCCIPITAL

THALAMUS

saliency

SCs

SCi

Page 31: Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Brian White Centre for Neuroscience Studies Queen’s, Kingston, Ontario,

Munoz Lab Doug MunozTakuro Ikeda

Collaborators: Laurent IttiDavid Berg

Technical: Ann Lablans, Lindsey Duck, Donald Brien, Sean Hickman, Mike Lewis.

Funding: CIHR, DARPA