Correction to: Scientific reports https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-89599-1, published online 13 May 2021


The original version of this Article contained an error in Figure 1C, where the label “Hyporeflective Band” was mislabelled as “Hyperreflective Band”.


This error has been corrected in the original Article.

Figure 1
figure 1

Effect of light and dark adaptation on the HB in outer retina. (A) Example of OCT images captured in light and dark from the same mouse eye. Red arrows point the HB between photoreceptor tip (PRT) and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) layers. NFL nerve fiber layer, IPL inner plexiform layer, INL inner nuclear layer, OPL outer plexiform layer, ONL outer nuclear layer, ELM external limiting membrane, IS/ep inner segment/ellipsoid layer. (B) Representative intensity profiles averaged from all four radial scans of the eye in (A) for images captured in light (red) and dark (blue). HB is marked by a bar on left side. (C) Magnified view of HB. The dashed line represents the baseline constructed by connecting the maximal intensity for photoreceptor tip layer and RPE layer (Supplemental Figure S2) and rotated to horizontal. The intensity profiles are shifted laterally with center aligned for light and dark conditions. HB magnitude is calculated as the peak distance from the baseline line; HB width is measured as length between two half maximal points. Normalized light–dark responses of HB magnitude (D) and width (E) were made from 5 C57BL/6J mouse groups (Table 1) and one 129S6/ev group under light and dark conditions. Values are normalized by standard deviation of each mouse group. An asterisk indicates the credibility interval excludes 0 (equivalent to statistically significant).