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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Jul 22.
Published in final edited form as: Neuron. 2020 May 18;107(2):338–350.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2020.04.022

Figure 6: Binocular representations of orientation preference are not trivially related to the monocular representations.

Figure 6:

(A-B) Widefield maps of orientation preference (A) and homogeneity index maps (B) for naive (top row) and experienced (bottom row) animals. Preferred orientation and selectively (or homogeneity index) are represented by image hue and saturation (or image color). Grayed or blacked out regions represent blood vessels.

(C-D) Circular correlation of the binocular to monocular orientation preference maps (J) and Pearson’s correlation of fine-network structure (homogeneity index) for the binocular to monocular preferred orientation maps (K) (mean±SEM).

Asterisks denote significance between groups (*:p<0.05,**:p<0.01, ns: p>0.05). Animal experiments: naive (n=6) and experienced (n=7 widefield).