Temporal sensitivity of macaque ganglion cells to lights of different chromaticity
โ Scribed by Joel Pokorny; Vivianne C. Smith; Barry B. Lee; Tsaiyao Yeh
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 91 KB
- Volume
- 26
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0361-2317
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Three psychophysical paradigms have shown that moderately high retinal illuminance (ca. 1000 td) longwavelength chromatic adaptation results in a disproportionate reduction in visual sensitivity to rapidly modulated lights. (i) Critical-flicker-fusion -log retinal illuminance (CFF-log I) functions are shallower for long-wavelength than middle-wavelength modulated lights. (ii) A long-wavelength light modulated just above CFF appears as flickering if a steady middle-wavelength pedestal is added. (iii) The R/G ratio for heterochromatic modulation photometric (HMP) equality increases with light level when the mean chromaticity is ฯท605 nm, but not when it is ฯท570 nm. The goal was to evaluate whether Magnocellular-(MC-) pathway retinal ganglion cells show reduced modulation sensitivity with long-wavelength adaptation, as is observed with these three psychophysical paradigms. In Experiment (1), CFFs for 554 and 638 nm lights were estimated by noting the temporal frequencies at which the cells firing fell below 10 imp/s. CFF was measured for light levels between 1-1000 td. Seventeen of 17 units showed a higher CFF at 1000 td for 554 nm, consistent with psychophysical observation. In Experiment ( 2), a steady 1000 td 554 nm pedestal was added to a 1000 td 638 nm modulated light. Four of 6 units showed higher 638 nm CFF when the steady 554 nm pedestal was present. In Experiment (3), Heterochromatic Modulation Photometry responsivities were obtained at 200 and 2000 td as a function of the relative modulation of 554 and 638 nm counterphase lights. Chromaticity was metameric to either 605 or 570 nm. Fifteen of 17 units showed substantial changes in log (R/G) with luminance for the 605 nm, but not for the 570 nm adaptation condition. Thus, temporal phenomena observed psychophysically may be seen in MC-pathway cells. The results are interpretable as arising from interactions between signals originating from the L-and M-cone receptor types, not from differences in temporal properties of the two-cone types.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Pregnant B6C3F1 mice were exposed to a single whole body X-irradiation on day 4 (73-74 hr postconception) of gestation. In experiment 1, they were sacrificed at 2, 4, 6, or 9 hr after a dose of 2 Gy, and their embryos were removed and examined with light and electron microscopy. In experiment 2, dos
Schwann cells of the peripheral nervous system are distinguished by morphological and functional criteria in myelinating and non-myelinating subtypes. We and others have previously reported that Schwann cells in isolated peripheral human and rat nerve respond to extracellular application of ATP with