Abstract
The medicinal leech has five pairs of eyes, each with about 50 photoreceptors. Receptors produce propagating impulses which constitute their output to second order neurons in the CNS. Within the eye, receptors have diverse thresholds, and thus the aggregate output of the eye is graded with light intensity. By having many receptors in parallel, the eye may achieve better intensity discrimination and temporal response than would be predicted from the relatively poor characteristics of individual receptors. Receptors in eyes 3–5 on one side of the animal excite the ipsilateral LV (lateral visual) cell, an interneuron in the first segmental ganglion. By physiological tests the receptor axons are electrically coupled to the LV cell. Moreover, the LV cell is Lucifer Yellow dye‐coupled to many fine fibers that appear to be receptor axons of the ipsilateral eyes 3–5. The receptors of the contralateral eyes 3–5, and those of the photosensitive sensilla lining the body inhibit the LV cell via polysynaptic pathways. Thus, the LV cells are central elements of the neural circuit processing input from the leech's spatially distributed visual system.