Spatial properties of goldfish ganglion cells.
Open Access
- 1 June 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 93 (6) , 1147-1169
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.93.6.1147
Abstract
We systematically classified goldfish ganglion cells according to their spatial summation properties using the same techniques and criteria used in cat and monkey research. Results show that goldfish ganglion cells can be classified as X-, Y-, or W-like based on their responses to contrast-reversal gratings. Like cat X cells, goldfish X-like cells display linear spatial summation. Goldfish Y-like cells, like cat Y cells, respond with frequency doubling at all spatial positions when the contrast-reversal grating consists of high spatial frequencies. There is also a third class of neurons, which is neither X- nor Y-like; many of these cells' properties are similar to those of the "not-X" cells found in the eel retina. Spatial filtering characteristics were obtained for each cell by drifting sinusoidal gratings of various spatial frequencies and contrasts across the receptive field of the cell at a constant temporal rate. The spatial tuning curves of the cell depend on the temporal parameters of the stimulus; at high drift rates, the tuning curves lose their low spatial frequency attenuation. To explore this phenomenon, temporal contrast response functions were derived from the cells' responses to a spatially uniform field whose luminance varied sinusoidally in time. These functions were obtained for the center, the surround, and the entire receptive field. The results suggest that differences in the cells' spatial filtering across stimulus drift rate are due to changes in the interaction of the center and surround mechanisms; at low temporal frequencies, the center and surround responses are out-of-phase and mutually antagonistic, but at higher temporal rates their responses are in-phase and their interaction actually enhances the cell's responsiveness.This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pattern detection and the two-dimensional Fourier transform: Flickering checkerboards and chromatic mechanismsVision Research, 1976
- Linear and nonlinear spatial subunits in Y cat retinal ganglion cells.The Journal of Physiology, 1976
- Quantitative analysis of retinal ganglion cell classifications.The Journal of Physiology, 1976
- Spectral relations of cone pigments in goldfish.The Journal of general physiology, 1976
- The optical system of the goldfish eyeVision Research, 1973
- The effects of carbon dioxide on the excised goldfish retinaVision Research, 1972
- Interaction between colour and spatial coded processes converging to retinal ganglion cells in goldfishThe Journal of Physiology, 1971
- Physiological and morphological identification of horizontal, bipolar and amacrine cells in goldfish retinaThe Journal of Physiology, 1970
- Colour‐coded ganglion cells in the goldfish retina: extension of their receptive fields by means of new stimuliThe Journal of Physiology, 1968
- The contrast sensitivity of retinal ganglion cells of the catThe Journal of Physiology, 1966