Survey of spiking in the mouse visual system reveals functional hierarchy.
Joshua H SiegleXiaoxuan JiaSéverine DurandSam GaleCorbett BennettNile GraddisGreggory HellerTamina K RamirezHannah ChoiJennifer A LuvianoPeter A GroblewskiRuweida AhmedAnton ArkhipovAmy BernardYazan N BillehDillan BrownMichael A BuiceNicolas CainShiella CaldejonLinzy CasalAndrew ChoMaggie ChvilicekTimothy C CoxKael DaiDaniel J DenmanSaskia E J de VriesRoald DietzmanLuke EspositoColin FarrellDavid FengJohn GalbraithMarina GarrettEmily C GelfandNicole HancockJulie A HarrisRobert HowardBrian HuRoss HytnenRamakrishnan IyerErika JessettKatelyn JohnsonIndia KatoJustin KigginsSophie LambertJerome LecoqPeter LedochowitschJung Hoon LeeArielle LeonYang LiElizabeth LiangFuhui LongKyla MaceJose MelchiorDaniel MillmanTyler MollenkopfChelsea NayanLydia NgKiet NgoThuyahn NguyenPhilip R NicovichKat NorthGabriel Koch OckerDoug OllerenshawMichael OliverMarius PachitariuJed PerkinsMelissa RedingDavid ReidMiranda RobertsonKara RonellenfitchSam SeidCliff SlaughterbeckMichelle StoecklinDavid SullivanBen SuttonJackie SwappCarol ThompsonKristen TurnerWayne WakemanJennifer D WhitesellDerric WilliamsAli WillifordRob YoungHongkui ZengSarah NaylorJohn W PhillipsR Clay ReidSamuel D GaleShawn R OlsenChristof KochPublished in: Nature (2021)
The anatomy of the mammalian visual system, from the retina to the neocortex, is organized hierarchically1. However, direct observation of cellular-level functional interactions across this hierarchy is lacking due to the challenge of simultaneously recording activity across numerous regions. Here we describe a large, open dataset-part of the Allen Brain Observatory2-that surveys spiking from tens of thousands of units in six cortical and two thalamic regions in the brains of mice responding to a battery of visual stimuli. Using cross-correlation analysis, we reveal that the organization of inter-area functional connectivity during visual stimulation mirrors the anatomical hierarchy from the Allen Mouse Brain Connectivity Atlas3. We find that four classical hierarchical measures-response latency, receptive-field size, phase-locking to drifting gratings and response decay timescale-are all correlated with the hierarchy. Moreover, recordings obtained during a visual task reveal that the correlation between neural activity and behavioural choice also increases along the hierarchy. Our study provides a foundation for understanding coding and signal propagation across hierarchically organized cortical and thalamic visual areas.