Ivo Spiegel

Ivo Spiegel
Ivo Spiegel
Seeing Differently Under Pressure
Weizmann Institute of Science

Ivo Spiegel, Zuckerman Faculty Scholar at the Department of Brain Sciences at Weizmann Institute of Science has published the results of a new study, “Behavioural states control binocular vision through input-specific mechanisms,” in Nature Communications. The study found that the brain’s integration of input from both eyes is not fixed, but changes rapidly depending on the subject’s state ( calm vs. highly alert, for example). In high-arousal states, the brain relies more on input from one and less on combined binocular processing, likely to better support fast, goal-directed behavior.

Abstract: 
Binocular vision is essential for high-acuity stereopsis, depth perception and goal-directed behaviours, but whether binocular visual processing is modulated according to an animal’s behavioral state remains unknown. By combining behavioral tracking with calcium imaging in layer 2/3 excitatory neurons in the binocular zone of the primary visual cortex of adult mice, we demonstrate that binocularity and binocular integration change rapidly in a state-dependent manner via eye-/input-specific cellular mechanisms.