Mapping function in the tree shrew visual system using functional ultrasound imaging

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Abstract

We adapted functional ultrasound imaging (fUSI) for awake, head-fixed northern tree shrews and used it to produce functional maps of visual processing at ∼100 µm spatial resolution and ∼100 ms temporal resolution. Using classical retinotopic stimuli, full-field noise, motion localizers, and object versus scrambled object contrasts, we demonstrate robust, spatially specific hemodynamic responses across primary and extrastriate visual cortex, superior colliculus and subcortical structures. fUSI reliably reveals retinotopic reversals, laterality, and stimulus-selective modules, and yields high signal-to-noise %CBV changes that enable single-session mapping and targeting of electrophysiology or perturbations. These mesoscale maps provide a systems-level complement to recent high-density electrophysiological surveys of tree shrew visual cortex, which reported a compressed ventral-stream hierarchy and surprisingly early emergence of object coding in V2 (Lanfranchi et al., 2025). Together, our results establish fUSI as a powerful, scalable tool for functional mapping in the tree shrew, bridging large-scale circuit measurement and single-neuron electrophysiology and accelerating this species’ utility as a bridge between rodent genetics and primate vision.

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