BISC 230Lgx Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Ganglion Cell, Optic Nerve, Cone Cell

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Layers of the reina (inside out) a. b. c. d. Light goes through the cell layers to the rod and cone cell layer in the back, then back through to the front of the reina to ganglion and opic nerve ibers. Cone-bipolar cell connecion: a. b. c. d. a. b. c. d. Without light simulus, the cell has baseline neurotransmiter glutamate acivity, is depolarized. With light simulus, the cell hyperpolarizes, transmiter level decreases. Of-center: turning of light --> more glutamate --> excited. On-center: normally inhibited by glutamate, so when the light turns on and there is less transmiter, it is excited. Ganglion cell response corresponds to the bipolar response (if the bipolar cell is excited, the ganglion cell with it will also be excited, and vice versa) A circle of photoreceptors converge to one bipolar cell and one ganglion cell. Finding the edges of light and dark are very disinct - good at detecing luminance contrast.

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