optic nerve response
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2017 ◽  
Vol 284 (1862) ◽  
pp. 20170759 ◽  
Author(s):  
Iñigo Novales Flamarique

Besides colour and intensity, some invertebrates are able to independently detect the polarization of light. Among vertebrates, such separation of visual modalities has only been hypothesized for some species of anchovies whose cone photoreceptors have unusual ultrastructure that varies with retinal location. Here, I tested this hypothesis by performing physiological experiments of colour and polarization discrimination using the northern anchovy, Engraulis mordax . Optic nerve recordings showed that the ventro-temporal (VT), but not the ventro-nasal (VN), retina was polarization sensitive, and this coincided with the exclusive presence of polarization-sensitive photoreceptors in the VT retina. Spectral (colour) sensitivity recordings from the VN retina indicated the contribution of two spectral cone mechanisms to the optic nerve response, whereas only one contributed to the VT retina. This was supported by the presence of only one visual pigment in the VT retina and two in the VN retina, suggesting that only the VN retina was associated with colour sensitivity. Behavioural tests further demonstrated that anchovies could discriminate colour and the polarization of light using the ventral retina. Thus, in analogy with the visual system of some invertebrates, the northern anchovy has a retina with segregated retinal pathways for colour and polarization vision.


1996 ◽  
Vol 36 (6) ◽  
pp. 797-816 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernhard Jurklies ◽  
Alain Kaelin-Lang ◽  
Günter Niemeyer

1993 ◽  
Vol 33 (13) ◽  
pp. 1739-1746 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luc Beaudet ◽  
Howard I. Browman ◽  
Craig W. Hawryshyn

1974 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. W. Daw ◽  
A. L. Pearlman

The migration of the screening pigment was investigated in the retina of the intact squid. The action spectrum of pigment migration corresponds to the action spectrum of the visual pigment, rhodopsin, rather than to the absorption spectrum of the screening pigment. The total number of quanta required for a fixed criterion of pigment migration is the same, when the quanta are delivered over any period of time from 6 s to an hour or more. When less than 3–10% of the rhodopsin is isomerized, the screening pigment migrates out to the tips of the receptors with a time-course of 5–15 min, and back again over the same period of time. When rather more than 10% is isomerized, the outward migration takes 5–15 min, but the screening pigment does not migrate inwards, even after several hours in the dark. Indirect evidence suggests that the band of screening pigment, when it reaches the tips of the receptors, is approximately equivalent to a filter of 0.6 log units. The spectral sensitivity of the optic nerve response was measured, and was found to be broader than the absorption spectrum of squid rhodopsin in vitro; the broadness could be explained by self-screening, assuming a density of rhodopsin of 0.6 log units at 500 nm.


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