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Автор Dacey, Dennis M.
Дата выпуска 2000
dc.description The primate retina is an exciting focus in neuroscience, where recent data from molecular genetics, adaptive optics, anatomy, and physiology, together with measures of human visual performance, are converging to provide new insights into the retinal origins of color vision. Trichromatic color vision begins when the image is sampled by short- (S), middle- (M) and long- (L) wavelength-sensitive cone photoreceptors. Diverse retinal cell types combine the cone signals to create separate luminance, red-green, and blue-yellow pathways. Each pathway is associated with distinctive retinal architectures. Thus a blue-yellow pathway originates in a bistratified ganglion cell type and associated interneurons that combine excitation from S cones and inhibition from L and M cones. By contrast, a red-green pathway, in which signals from L and M cones are opposed, is associated with the specialized anatomy of the primate fovea, in which the “midget” ganglion cells receive dominant excitatory input from a single L or M cone.
Формат application.pdf
Издатель Annual Reviews
Копирайт Annual Reviews
Название Parallel Pathways for Spectral Coding in Primate Retina
DOI 10.1146/annurev.neuro.23.1.743
Print ISSN 0147-006x
Журнал Annual Review of Neuroscience
Том 23
Первая страница 743
Последняя страница 775
Аффилиация Dacey, Dennis M.; Department of Biological Structure and The Regional Primate Research Center, The University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, 98195–7420; email: dmd@u.washington.edu

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