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Receptive fields and functional architecture in the retina

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 587, Issue 12, Pages 2753-2767

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2009.170704

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NEI NIH HHS [R01 EY03014, EY 08124, R01 EY003014, R01 EY008124] Funding Source: Medline

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Functional architecture of the striate cortex is known mostly at the tissue level-how neurons of different function distribute across its depth and surface on a scale of millimetres. But explanations for its design - why it is just so - need to be addressed at the synaptic level, a much finer scale where the basic description is still lacking. Functional architecture of the retina is known from the scale of millimetres down to nanometres, so we have sought explanations for various aspects of its design. Here we review several aspects of the retina's functional architecture and find that all seem governed by a single principle: represent the most information for the least cost in space and energy. Specifically: (i) why are OFF ganglion cells more numerous than ON cells? Because natural scenes contain more negative than positive contrasts, and the retina matches its neural resources to represent them equally well; (ii) why do ganglion cells of a given type overlap their dendrites to achieve 3-fold coverage? Because this maximizes total information represented by the array - balancing signal-to-noise improvement against increased redundancy; (iii) why do ganglion cells form multiple arrays? Because this allows most information to be sent at lower rates, decreasing the space and energy costs for sending a given amount of information. This broad principle, operating at higher levels, probably contributes to the brain's immense computational efficiency.

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