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Physiology of Photoreceptors

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Title: Physiology of Photoreceptors


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Physiology of Photoreceptors
  • Vertebrate photoreceptors hyperpolarize and
    produce graded potentials
  • Photoreceptors use glutamate as transmitter
  • Bipolar cells can both hyperpolarize and
    depolarize producing both ON and OFF responses
  • ON bipolar glutamate is inhibitory
  • OFF bipolar glutamate is excitatory

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Receptive Fields
  • Record from a single ganglion cell in the retina
  • Using small spots of light activate the portion
    of the visual field that activates the neuron

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Schematic Retina Showing a Receptive Field
Orange are excitatory inputs into the receptive
field. Blue are inhibitory inputs into the
receptive field.
Receptors
Horizontal Cells

Bipolar Cells
-
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Amacrine Cells
Ganglion Cells
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Light strikes a cone with an excitatory connection
to the ganglion cell
Number of Action Potentials 1
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Light now fillsthe excitatory region of the
receptive field.
Number of Action Potentials 12
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If light falls in the inhibitory region,
the firing rate of cell is reduced.
Number of Action Potentials 8
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Lateral Inhibition Variations in the On/Off
Structure
  • Lights on the edge of the field cause a reduction
    in the background activity of the cell
  • On and off neurons
  • Center-surround structure need to examine in
    light of different channels of information direct
    to the cerebral cortex

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Receptive Fields in the Retina
  • Two types of ganglion cells
  • on and off dependent upon the bipolar neurons
  • Center Surround structure of the receptive field
    described by Kuffler
  • Best activated by central illumination
  • Best inhibited by annular illumination

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Different View of Center-Surround Organization
Parallel Pathways
  • Transformation of visual information is evident
    in the ganglion cells of the retina
  • X cells sustained linear responses
  • Y cells transient, excitatory non-linear
    responses

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P and M Projections to LGN Different Physiologic
Channels
  • P cells in the retina (also known as midget
    ganglion cells) project to the parvocellular
    layers (3-6) of LGN
  • M cells in the retina (also known as parasol
    cells) project to the magnocellular (ventral
    most) layers (1-2) of the LGN
  • Intercalated layers are termed koniocellular
    (dustlike or tiny cells)

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Physiology of V1
  • Originally studied by Hubel and Wiesel who
    demonstrated two types of neurons
  • Simple cells constructed from LGN on/off cells
  • Complex cells constructed from simple cells

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Cortical Simple Cell
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Cortical Complex Cells Example of Hierarchy of V1
  • Strong orientation selectivity in cells
  • Moving bars in a specific direction
  • NO on/off areas like in simple cells
  • Receptive fields were not elongated
  • Located in layers 2,3, and 5 which receive input
    from layer 4 (from ? simple cells)

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