The Journal of Neuroscience, June 15, 2001, 21(12):4514-4522
Hierarchical Processing of Horizontal Disparity Information in
the Visual Forebrain of Behaving Owls
Andreas
Nieder and
Hermann
Wagner
Lehrstuhl für Zoologie/Tierphysiologie, Institut für
Biologie II, Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule
Aachen, D-52074 Aachen, Germany
According to their restricted receptive fields and input-filter
characteristics, disparity-sensitive neurons at early processing levels
of the visual system perform rather ambiguous computations; they
respond vigorously to disparity in false-matched images and show
multiple response peaks in their disparity-tuning profiles. On the
other hand, the perception of depth from binocular disparity is
reliable, thus raising the question as to where and how in the brain
additional processing is accomplished leading toward behaviorally
relevant disparity detection. To address this issue, tuning data during
stimulation with correlated and anticorrelated random-dot stereograms
(a-RDS) were obtained from 52 disparity-sensitive visual Wulst
neurons in three behaving owls. From the disparity-tuning curves,
several quantitative measures were derived that allowed to determine
the response ambiguity of a cell. A systematic decline of
response ambiguities with increasing response latencies was observed.
An increase in response latencies of neurons was correlated with a
decrease of the strength of responses to a-RDS. Declining responses to
a-RDS are expected for global detectors, because an owl was not able to
discriminate depth in psychophysical tests with a-RDS. In addition,
suppression of response side peaks was increased and disparity tuning
was enhanced with growing response latencies. These results suggest a
functional hierarchy of disparity processing in the owl's forebrain,
leading from spatial filters to more global disparity detectors that
may be able to solve the correspondence problem. Nonlinear threshold
operations and inhibition are proposed as candidate mechanisms to
resolve coding ambiguities.
Key words:
binocular disparity; stereovision; coding ambiguity; hierarchical processing; visual forebrain; radiotelemetry; owl
Copyright © 2001 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/01/21124514-09$05.00/0