Term
When light goes from scotopic to photopic, what % of rhodopsin is available to catch light? |
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Definition
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Term
What cells do the PR's talk to? |
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Definition
horizontal cells, bipolar cells, and other PR's |
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Term
Why are there more than one form of cone channel? |
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Definition
Different color channels? |
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Term
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Definition
the area on the retina in which a stimulus will produce a response from a particular cell.
OR
The area in space that correlates to that area on the retina that produces a response from the cell of interest. |
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Term
What is an area response curve? |
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Definition
The summation of response to stimuli presented in the receptive field |
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Term
How are PR and bipolar cell area response curves different? |
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Definition
both respond to a spot of light, but only the bipolar cell will respond to an annulus of light centered on the receptive field |
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Term
What is the neurotransmitter for horizontal cells? |
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Definition
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Term
How many types of horizontal cells are there, and what is the nomenclature? |
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Definition
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Term
What are H1 horizontal cells? |
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Definition
receive input from M and L cones under photopic; rods under scotopic. Measures luminosity! |
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Term
What does not synapse with H1 horizontal cells? |
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Definition
S-cones (cyanolabe or 426 nm) |
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Term
What does the H1 cell control? |
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Definition
Which PR to turn off or on, it controls dark and light adaptation |
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Term
What are H2 horizontal cells? |
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Definition
Receive strong input from the S-cones in addition to the M and L cones |
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Term
What is the ultimate purpose for the H2 cells? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the spatial summation fields for horizontal cells? |
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Definition
They are circular over 1 arc minute for cones, circular over 10 arc minutes for the rods |
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Term
What do bipolar cells do? |
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Definition
Carry information from the outer plexiform leayer to the inner plexiform layer |
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Term
What synapses with bipolar cells? |
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Definition
PR and horizontal cells on the dendritic side, amacrine and ganglion cells on the axonal side |
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Term
Do bipolars have their own type of receptive field? |
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Definition
yes, they are doughnut shaped known as On- and Off-cells and feature spatial antagonism |
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Term
What is spatial antagonism? |
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Definition
When there is a double receptive field of opposite 'sign' such as an ON center with an OFF surround or vice versa |
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Term
How many bipolar cells per eye? |
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Definition
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Term
How do horizontal cells turn off PR's? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the field for an ON cell? |
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Definition
Center is ON, annular OFF periphery |
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Term
What is the field for an OFF cell? |
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Definition
center is OFF, annular ON periphery |
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Term
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Definition
conventional synapse from the PR --> bipolar cell; only two elements involved. |
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Term
What is generally stronger for an area response, the center or peripheral response? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
the PR forms the pre-synaptic element, but there are multiple (usually three ) post-synaptic elements. The result is PR's can synapse with one horizontal and one bipolar cell at a time. |
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Term
What are purpose of triead synapses? |
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Definition
Allows cross-talk, maintains more efficient neurotransmitter use, sums horizontal cell's message with the PR before it reaches bipolar cells |
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Term
What do bipolar cells synapse with? |
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Definition
sometimes other bipolars and amacrine cells, this is called a backwards flow. Mainly synapses with ganglion cells |
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Term
What is lateral inhibition? |
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Definition
an active process by which adjacent PR's will be managed by a horizontal cell that is deciding which PR's will get to be fire and be 'heard' |
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Term
What neurotransmitter do On and Off cells use? |
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Definition
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Term
What are diffuse vs midget bipolar cells? |
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Definition
midget are 'broadband' connection, carrying single cones through to the ganglion. For high acuity.
Diffuse bipolar cells have a larger cell body and more extensive dendritic trees --> talk to more than one cone, usually ~6. H1 channel, not H2. |
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Term
Are rod and cone bipolar channels discrete? |
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Definition
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Term
What is lost and what is gained when nerves are unmyelinated? |
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Definition
Speed, but what we gain is the possibility for a graded potential |
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Term
What is the physical location and innervation of an amacrine cell? |
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Definition
In the inner nuclear layer, synapse in the inner plexiform layer.
Synapses in dyads, on pre and two post synaptic elements |
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Term
What is a mechanical advantage of having unmyelinated retinal nerves? |
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Definition
No myelin to block light transmission and reduce acuity and sensitivity |
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Term
What do amacrine cell do in frogs? |
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Definition
Initiate SkM response to stimuli; small shadow initiates tongue (eating), big shadow initiates legs (flight). Called the photomechanical effect |
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Term
What do amacrine cells do in humans? |
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Definition
reponse do motion, inhibit retina that is viewing a stationary field. Play a role in planning saccades |
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Term
How many ganglion cells are there per eye? |
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Definition
1.2 million ganglion cells |
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Term
Ganglion cell AP's are the second in the retinal neuronal cascade after which type of cell? |
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Definition
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Term
what are the 5 types of ganglion cells? |
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Definition
Midget
Parasol
Bistratified
Photosensitive
Other |
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Term
What is the most populous type of ganglion cells? |
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Definition
Midget ganglion cells, about 70% of all ganglion cells |
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Term
What do midget ganglion cells do? |
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Definition
Begin the parvocellular stream: "central vision/what is it" stream. High bandwidth portion of retina. Low # of PR synapses per cell. |
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Term
Are midget cells slow or fast? |
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Definition
Slower, can have sustained reponse, poor temporal resolution, longer response.
The retina's 'slow twitch' cells |
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Term
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Definition
Magnocellular stream, the 'where' stream. Goes to LGN layer 2. Do not see color, but can see low contrast. |
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Term
How fast are parasol cells? |
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Definition
Relatively fast, not slow. Have better temporal resolution. Can see flicker. More rapid conduction due to larger axons |
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Term
What are bistratified ganglion cells? |
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Definition
Make up 8% of ganglion cells, start the konio stream. Used in blue-yellow color vision |
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Term
What is a photosensitive ganglion? |
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Definition
Has melanopsin photopigment, innervates the superchiasmic nucleus that controls circadian rhythms in pineal gland via melatonin |
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