\documentclass[a4paper,12pt,pdftex]{exam} \newcommand{\ptitle}{Orientation tuning} \input{../header.tex} \firstpagefooter{Supervisor: Jan Benda}{phone: 29 74573}% {email: jan.benda@uni-tuebingen.de} \begin{document} \input{../instructions.tex} %%%%%%%%%%%%%% Questions %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \begin{questions} \question In the visual cortex V1 orientation sensitive neurons respond to bars in dependence on their orientation. How is the orientation of a bar encoded by the activity of a population of orientation sensitive neurons? In an electrophysiological experiment, 6 neurons have been recorded simultaneously. First, the tuning of these neurons was characterized by presenting them bars in a range of 12 orientation angles. Each orientation was presented 50 times. Each of the \texttt{unit*.mat} files contains the responses of one of the neurons. In there, \texttt{angles} is a vector with the orientation angles of the bars in degrees. \texttt{spikes} is a cell array that contains the vectors of spike times for each angle and presentation. The spike times are given in seconds. The stimulation with the bar starts a time $t_0=0$ and ends at time $t_1=200$\,ms. Then the population activity of the 6 neurons was measured in response to arbitrarily oriented bars. The responses of the 6 neurons to 50 presentation of a bar are stored in the \texttt{spikes} variables of the \texttt{population*.mat} files. The \texttt{angle} variable holds the angle of the presented bar. \continue \begin{parts} \part Illustrate the spiking activity of the V1 cells in response to different orientation angles of the bars by means of spike raster plots (of a single unit). \part Plot the firing rate of each of the 6 neurons as a function of the orientation angle of the bar. As the firing rate compute the number of spikes in the time interval $0