Performance of cat retinal ganglion cells at low light levels

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Abstract

Responses of brisk-sustained cat retinal ganglion cells were examined using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. Stimuli were brief luminance changes superimposed upon a weak steady pedestal ranging from 27 to 47,000 quanta (507 nm) per second at the cornea, Overall quantum efficiencies of cells ranged up to ~ 13% and were compatible with previous estimates at absolute threshold. The main work was done on on-center cells, but a small sample of off-center units behaved similarly. Experimental ROC curves verified a set of qualitative predictions based on a theoretical treatment of performance, assuming that response variability resulted solely from quantum fluctations. However, quantitative predictions were not fulfilled. The discrepancy could be resolved by postulating a source of added internal variance, R, the value of which could then be deduced from the experimental measurements. A ganglion cell model limited by a fixed amount of added variance from physiological sources and having access to a fixed fraction of incident quanta can account quantatively for (a) slopes of ROC curves, (b) variation of detectability with magnitude of both increments and decrements, and (c) performance over a range of pedestal intensities. Estimates of the proportion of incident quanta used ranged up to 29% under some conditions, a figure approximately matching estimates of the fraction of corneal quanta that isomerize rhodopsin in the cat.

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Levick, W. R., Thibos, L. N., Cohn, T. E., Catanzaro, D., & Barlow, H. B. (1983). Performance of cat retinal ganglion cells at low light levels. Journal of General Physiology, 82(3), 405–426. https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.82.3.405

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