Stereopsisis a ubiquitousfeature of primatemammalian vision, but littleis known aboutif and how rodents such asmice use stereoscopic vision. We used random dot stereograms to test for stereopsis in male and female mice, and they were able to discriminate near from far surfaces over a range of disparities, with diminishing performance for small and large binocular disparities. Based on two-photon measurements of disparity tuning, the range of disparities represented in the visual cortex aligns with the behavior and covers a broad range of disparities. When we examined their binocular eye movements, we found that, unlike primates, mice did not systematically vary relative eye positions or use vergence eye movements when presented with different disparities. Nonetheless, the representation of disparity tuning was wide enough to capture stereoscopic information over a range of potential vergence angles. Although mice share fundamental characteristics of stereoscopic vision with primates and carnivores, their lack of disparity-dependent vergence eye movements and wide neuronal representation suggests that they may use a distinct strategy for stereopsis.
CITATION STYLE
Samonds, J. M., Choi, V., & Priebe, N. J. (2019). Mice discriminate stereoscopic surfaces without fixating in depth. Journal of Neuroscience, 39(41), 8024–8037. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0895-19.2019
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