The dependence of response amplitude and variance of cat visual cortical neurones on stimulus contrast
- 1 February 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Experimental Brain Research
- Vol. 41-41 (3-4) , 414-419
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00238900
Abstract
Summary For neurones in the cat's striate cortex, we examined the dependence of response on the contrast of moving sinusoidal gratings. Most neurones showed a clear threshold contrast below which no response was elicited. Such thresholds presumably contribute to the animal's behavioural threshold, which should not be accounted for solely in terms of the detection of a signal in the presence of spontaneous “noise”. Above threshold, the response amplitude usually increased linearly with contrast until it began to saturate at the highest contrasts. The variance of the response increased with its amplitude; this finding perhaps underlies the Weber-Fechner relation for psychophysical contrast discrimination.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Spatial summation in the receptive fields of simple cells in the cat's striate cortex.The Journal of Physiology, 1978
- Complete adaptation to patterned stimuli: A necessary and sufficient condition for Weber's law for contrastVision Research, 1978
- Interactions between spatial frequency channelsVision Research, 1978
- Grating contrast: Discrimination may be better than detectionVision Research, 1974
- Neuronal variability: non-stationary responses to identical visual stimuliBrain Research, 1974
- Sensitivity of neurones in visual cortex (area 17) under different levels of anaesthesiaExperimental Brain Research, 1974
- The visual cortex as a spatial frequency analyserVision Research, 1973
- Grating resolution and refraction in the cat estimated from evoked cerebral potentialsVision Research, 1973
- Responses to single quanta of light in retinal ganglion cells of the catVision Research, 1971
- On the Firing Pattern of Spinal Neurones Activated from the Secondary Endings of Muscle SpindlesActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1967