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Calkins, D. J. (2001). Seeing with s cones. Progress in Retinal and Eye Research, 20(3), 255–287. Added by: Sarina (2016-02-07 11:40:35) Last edited by: Sarina (2016-02-07 11:42:33) |
Resource type: Journal Article DOI: doi:10.1016/S1350-9462(00)00026-4 BibTeX citation key: Calkins2001 View all bibliographic details |
Categories: Englisch = English Creators: Calkins Collection: Progress in Retinal and Eye Research |
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Abstract |
The S cone is highly conserved across mammalian species, sampling the retinal image with less spatial frequency than other cone photoreceptors. In human and monkey retina, the S cone represents typically 5–10% of the cone mosaic and distributes in a quasi-regular fashion over most of the retina. In the fovea, the S cone mosaic recedes from a central “S-free” zone whose size depends on the optics of the eye for a particular primate species: the smaller the eye, the less extreme the blurring of short wavelengths, and the smaller the zone. In the human retina, the density of the S mosaic predicts well the spatial acuity for S-isolating targets across the retina. This acuity is likely supported by a bistratified retinal ganglion cell whose spatial density is about that of the S cone. The dendrites of this cell collect a depolarizing signal from S cones that opposes a summed signal from M and L cones. The source of this depolarizing signal is a specialized circuit that begins with expression of the L-AP4 or mGluR6 glutamate receptor at the S cone→bipolar cell synapse. The pre-synaptic circuitry of this bistratified ganglion cell is consistent with its S-ON/(M+L)-OFF physiological receptive field and with a role for the ganglion cell in blue/yellow color discrimination. The S cone also provides synapses to other types of retinal circuit that may underlie a contribution to the cortical areas involved with motion discrimination. |