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Orientation selectivity in the cat's striate cortex is invariant with stimulus contrast

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Summary

Extracellular responses of single units in striate cortex of the cat were studied quantitatively. Sinusoidal gratings were used as stimuli and the variables of interest were orientation and contrast. Specifically, we wanted to determine if orientation tuning was dependent on contrast. Of 45 cells studied in detail, two basic types of contrast-response pattern were observed, but most patterns were intermediate between these extremes. In one type, responses increased approximately linearly with log contrast while in the second, saturation was found at low contrast levels. For all these cells, orientation tuning characteristics were independent of contrast. An additional observation, made from 14 cells, was that stimuli presented at non-optimal orientations can suppress responses to below the general maintained discharge levels. In eight of these cases, the inhibition was clearly contrast-dependent.

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Supported by US National Institutes of Health Grant EY01175 and Research Career Development Award EY00092 to R.D. Freeman. G. Sclar received support from National Institutes of Health Training Grant EY07043

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Sclar, G., Freeman, R.D. Orientation selectivity in the cat's striate cortex is invariant with stimulus contrast. Exp Brain Res 46, 457–461 (1982). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00238641

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00238641

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