Mice Reveal Secrets: How Neuroscience is Clarifying Human Vision

by Dr Natalie Singh - Health Editor
0 comments

Despite the nursery rhyme about three blind mice, mouse eyesight is surprisingly sensitive.Studying how mice see has helped researchers discover unprecedented details about how individual brain cells communicate and work together to create a mental picture of the visual world.

I am a neuroscientist who studies how brain cells drive visual perception and how thes processes can fail in conditions such as autism. my lab “listens” to the electrical activity of neurons in the outermost part of the brain called the cerebral cortex, a large portion of which processes visual facts. Injuries to the visual cortex can lead to blindness and other visual deficits, even when the eyes themselves are unhurt.

Understanding the activity of individual neurons – and how they work together while the brain is actively using and processing information – is a long-standing goal of neuroscience.Researchers have moved much closer to achieving this goal thanks to new technologies aimed at the mouse visual system. And these findings will help scientists better see how the visual systems of people work.

The mind in the blink of an eye

Researchers long thought that vision in mice appeared sluggish with low clarity. But it turns out visual cortex neurons in mice – just like those in humans, monkeys, cats and ferrets – require specific visual features to trigger activity and are notably selective in alert and awake conditions.

My colleagues and I and others have found that mice are especially sensitive to visual stimuli directly in front of them. This is surprising, because mouse eyes face outward rather than forward. Forward-facing eyes, like those of cats and primates, naturally have a larger area of focus straight ahead compared to outward-facing eyes.

This image shows neurons in the mouse retina: cone photoreceptors (red), bipolar neurons (magenta), and a subtype of bipolar neuron (green).
Brian Liu and Melanie Samuel/Baylor College of Medicine/NIH via Flickr

This finding suggests that the specialization of the visual system to highlight the frontal visual field appears to be shared b“`html





How scientists are learning to ‘ask’ mice what they see

How scientists are learning to ‘ask’ mice what they see

Mice can be trained to drink water as a way to 'tell' researchers they see something.

Related Posts

Leave a Comment