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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 2 August 2002, pp. 1026-1039
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Neurology, Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston 02115; and 2Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114
Stasheff, Steven F. and
Richard H. Masland.
Functional Inhibition in Direction-Selective Retinal Ganglion
Cells: Spatiotemporal Extent and Intralaminar Interactions. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 1026-1039, 2002. We
recorded from ON-OFF direction-selective ganglion cells (DS
cells) in the rabbit retina to investigate in detail the inhibition that contributes to direction selectivity in these cells. Using paired
stimuli moving sequentially across the cells' receptive fields in the
preferred direction, we directly confirmed the prediction of
Wyatt and Daw (1975) that a wave of inhibition
accompanies any moving excitatory stimulus on its null side, at a fixed
spatial offset. Varying the interstimulus distance, stimulus size,
luminance, and speed yielded a spatiotemporal map of the strength of
inhibition within this region. This "null" inhibition was maximal
at an intermediate distance behind a moving stimulus: 1/2 to
11/2 times the width of the receptive field. The strength of
inhibition depended more on the distance behind the stimulus than on
stimulus speed, and the inhibition often lasted 1-2 s. These spatial
and temporal parameters appear to account for the known spatial
frequency and velocity tuning of ON-OFF DS cells to
drifting contrast gratings. Stimuli that elicit distinct ON
and OFF responses to leading and trailing edges revealed
that an excitatory response of either polarity could inhibit a
subsequent response of either polarity. For example, an OFF
response inhibited either an ON or OFF response of a subsequent stimulus. This inhibition apparently is conferred by a
neural element or network spanning the ON and
OFF sublayers of the inner plexiform layer, such as a
multistratified amacrine cell. Trials using a stationary flashing spot
as a probe demonstrated that the total amount of inhibition conferred
on the DS cell was equivalent for stimuli moving in either the null or
preferred direction. Apparently the cell does not act as a classic
"integrate and fire" neuron, summing all inputs at the soma.
Rather, computation of stimulus direction likely involves interactions
between excitatory and inhibitory inputs in local regions of the dendrites.
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