Abstract
1. Experiments are described in which the phosphene produced by passing alternating current of frequency 100 Hz through the eye is matched with a patch of light having the same apparent size.2. Matches of this type have been made against different background light intensities, and at various times after a strong retinal bleach.3. To match the phosphene under particular conditions of this type, it is found that the patch must be set some 1·5 log td brighter than its own threshold under the same conditions. Exceptions to this rule occur with very bright backgrounds, or very soon after bleaching.4. The increment threshold for a small spot of light on the phosphene in the dark is some 0·5 log td higher than for the same spot on a patch of light matched in appearance to the phosphene under the same conditions.5. The process linking electrical stimulation of the eye to firing of fibres in the optic nerve is deduced to be substantially unaffected by the state of adaptation of the eye, save perhaps in the exceptional conditions described in (3).6. It is therefore argued that this phosphene is the result of stimulation both of the retinal visual pathways lying central to the variable‐gain element commonly accepted to explain the facts of dark adaptation, and also of the input to this element that is supposed to alter its gain.

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