Journal
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 107, Issue 3, Pages 758-765Publisher
AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00609.2011
Keywords
acuity; psychophysics; vision
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Funding
- Howard Hughes Medical Institute
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Histed MH, Carvalho LA, Maunsell JH. Psychophysical measurement of contrast sensitivity in the behaving mouse. J Neurophysiol 107: 758-765, 2012. First published November 2, 2011; doi:10.1152/jn.00609.2011.-To understand how activity in mammalian neural circuits controls behavior, the mouse is a promising model system due to the convergence of genetic, optical, and physiological methods. The ability to control and quantify behavior precisely is also essential for these studies. We developed an operant visual detection paradigm to make visual psychophysical measurements: head-fixed mice make responses by pressing a lever. We designed this task to permit neurophysiological studies of behavior in cerebral cortex, where activity is variable from trial to trial and neurons encode many types of information simultaneously. To study neural responses in the face of this complexity, we trained mice to do a task where they perform hundreds of trials daily and perceptual thresholds can be measured. We used this task to measure both visual acuity and the minimum detectable contrast in behaving mice. We found that the mouse contrast response function is similar in shape to other species. They can detect low-contrast stimuli, with a peak contrast threshold of 2%, equivalent to similar to 15 degrees eccentric in human vision. Mouse acuity is modest, with an upper limit near 0.5 cycles/degrees, consistent with prior data.
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