Fig. 9 | Nature Communications

Fig. 9

From: Neural mechanisms of contextual modulation in the retinal direction selective circuit

Fig. 9The alternative text for this image may have been generated using AI.

Contextual modulation of pDSGCs is sensitive to the relative orientation of center and surround contours. a Example spike traces of a pDSGC from a control mouse evoked by the visual stimuli shown on the left. The red dashed line shows the boundary of the Off and On responses. b Comparison of pDSGC firing rate during surround-in-orthogonal versus surround-in-opposite gratings, pairwise comparison was performed using Wilcoxon signed-rank test. Off response: n = 14 cells from 8 mice, ***p < 0.001; On response: n = 13 cells from 7 mice, **p = 0.0081. c Upper panel: SI of Off spike during surround-in-orthogonal: Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to test whether the SI of surround-in-orthogonal is significantly higher than 0: p = 0.091. Lower panel: SI of On spike during surround-in-orthogonal: p = 0.32. The same sample groups as Fig. 8b. d-f Loose-patch recording of pDSGC under contrast-reversing stationary gratings. d Left: Schematics show the contrast-reversing stationary grating stimuli. Right: Spiking responses of an example pDSGC from a control mouse. Red dashed line labels the boundary of Off and On spiking. e Scatter plots compare pDSGC spike firing rate during uniform contrast-reversing gratings and antiphase contrast-reversing gratings. Off response: n = 29 cells from 7 mice, p = 0.14; On response: n = 26 cells from 7 mice, p = 0.70. f Same as e, but comparing pDSGC spike firing rate during uniform contrast-reversing gratings versus surround-in-orthogonal contrast-reversing gratings. Off response: n = 14 cells from 4 mice, *p = 0.020; On response: n = 11 cells from 4 mice, **p = 0.0098

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