Birds multiplex spectral and temporal visual information via retinal On- and Off-channels

Marvin Seifert*, Paul Roberts, George Kafetzis, Daniel Osorio*, Tom Baden*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

In vertebrate vision, early retinal circuits divide incoming visual information into functionally opposite elementary signals: On and Off, transient and sustained, chromatic and achromatic. Together these signals can yield an efficient representation of the scene for transmission to the brain via the optic nerve. However, this long-standing interpretation of retinal function is based on mammals, and it is unclear whether this functional arrangement is common to all vertebrates. Here we show that male poultry chicks use a fundamentally different strategy to communicate information from the eye to the brain. Rather than using functionally opposite pairs of retinal output channels, chicks encode the polarity, timing, and spectral composition of visual stimuli in a highly correlated manner: fast achromatic information is encoded by Off-circuits, and slow chromatic information overwhelmingly by On-circuits. Moreover, most retinal output channels combine On- and Off-circuits to simultaneously encode, or multiplex, both achromatic and chromatic information. Our results from birds conform to evidence from fish, amphibians, and reptiles which retain the full ancestral complement of four spectral types of cone photoreceptors.
Original languageEnglish
Article number5308
Number of pages19
JournalNature Communications
Volume14
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 Aug 2023

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