Motor and vestibular signals in the visual cortex permit the separation of self versus externally generated visual motion
Motor and vestibular signals in the visual cortex permit the separation of self versus externally generated visual motionMouse primary visual cortical neurons receive running, linear translation, and visual inputs that linearly combine to differentially represent the same visual flow information, depending on the motion status of the head. During locomotion, running suppresses translation input when the speed of these two internal signals is congruent; however, translation signals dominate cortical activity when they become incongruent.Mouse primary visual cortical neurons receive running, linear translation, and visual inputs that linearly combine to differentially represent the same visual flow information, depending on the motion status of the head. During locomotion, running suppresses translation input when the speed of these two internal signals is congruent; however, translation signals dominate cortical activity when they become incongruent.Mateo Vélez-Fort, Lee Cossell, Laura Porta, Claudia Clopath, Troy W. Margriehttps://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(25)00101-1?rss=yeshttp://www.cell.com/cell/inpress.rssCellCell RSS feed.Wireless News CampaignFebruary 20, 2025
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