ganglion cell

Retinal neurons {ganglion cell, retina} can receive from bipolar cells and send to thalamus lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN), which sends to visual-cortex hypercolumns.

midget ganglion cell

Small central-retina ganglion cells {midget ganglion cell} receive from one midget bipolar cell. Midget cells respond mostly to contrast. Most ganglion cells are midget ganglion cells.

parasol cell

Ganglion cells {parasol cell} {parasol ganglion cell} can receive from diffuse bipolar cells. Parasol cells respond mostly to change. Parasol cells are 10% of ganglion cells.

X cell

Ganglion X cells can make tonic and sustained signals, with slow conduction, to detect details and spatial orientation. X cells send to thalamus simple cells. X cells have large dendritic fields. X cells are more numerous in fovea.

Y cell

Ganglion Y cells can make phasic and transient signals, with fast conduction, to detect stimulus size and temporal motion. Y cells send to thalamus complex cells. Y cells have small dendritic fields. Y cells are more numerous in retinal periphery.

W cell

Ganglion W cells are small, are direction sensitive, and have slow conduction speed.

ON-center neuron

ON-center ganglion cells respond when light intensity above background level falls on their receptive field. Light falling on field surround inhibits cell. Bipolar cells excite ON-center neurons.

Four types of ON-center neuron depend on balance between cell excitation and inhibition. One has high firing rate at onset and zero rate at offset. One has high rate at onset, then zero, then high, and then zero. One has high rate at onset, goes to zero, and then rises to constant level. One has high rate at onset and then goes to zero.

OFF-center neuron

OFF-center ganglion cells increase output when light intensity decreases in receptive-field center. Light falling on field surround excites cell. Bipolar cells excite OFF-center neurons.

ON-OFF-center neuron

ON-OFF-center ganglion cells for motion use ON-center-neuron time derivatives to find movement position and direction. Amacrine cells excite transient ON-OFF-center neurons.

similar neurons

Ganglion cells are like auditory nerve cells, Purkinje cells, olfactory bulb cells, olfactory cortex cells, and hippocampal cells.

spontaneous activity

Ganglion-cell spontaneous activity can be high or low [Dowling, 1987] [Enroth-Cugell and Robson, 1984] [Wandell, 1995].

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Date Modified: 2022.0224