The mammalian retina consists of neurons of >60 distinct types, each playing a specific role in processing visual images. They are arranged in three main stages. The first decomposes the outputs of the rod and cone photoreceptors into ∼12 parallel information streams. The second connects these streams to specific types of retinal ganglion cells. The third combines bipolar and amacrine cell activity to create the diverse encodings of the visual world—roughly 20 of them—that the retina transmits to the brain. New transformations of the visual input continue to be found: at least half of the encodings sent to the brain (ganglion cell response selectivities) remain to be discovered. This diversity of the retina’s outputs has yet to be incorpora...
The retina is a remarkable piece of neural tissue, providing the gateway through which all visual in...
AbstractGanglion cells convey information from the retina back to the brain. Recent experiments have...
All visual experiences of the vertebrates begin with light being converted into electrical signals b...
The mammalian retina consists of neurons of >60 distinct types, each playing a specific role in proc...
The retina streams visual information to the brain through parallel channels with highly stereotyped...
The retina streams visual information to the brain through parallel channels with highly stereotyped...
We rely on our visual system to cope with the vast barrage of incoming light patterns and to extract...
We describe recent progress toward defining neuronal cell types in the mouse retina and attempt to e...
We rely on our visual system to cope with the vast barrage of incoming light patterns and to extract...
We rely on our visual system to cope with the vast barrage of incoming light patterns and to extract...
The vertebrate retina is a clearly organized signal-processing system. It contains more than 60 diff...
Parallel processing begins in the retina, where input from photoreceptors is transmitted to 12 types...
Understanding natural vision is one of the fundamental goals of sensory neuroscience. The only part ...
We rely on our visual system to cope with the vast barrage of incoming light patterns and to extract...
A computational model of visual processing in the vertebrate retina provides a unified explanation o...
The retina is a remarkable piece of neural tissue, providing the gateway through which all visual in...
AbstractGanglion cells convey information from the retina back to the brain. Recent experiments have...
All visual experiences of the vertebrates begin with light being converted into electrical signals b...
The mammalian retina consists of neurons of >60 distinct types, each playing a specific role in proc...
The retina streams visual information to the brain through parallel channels with highly stereotyped...
The retina streams visual information to the brain through parallel channels with highly stereotyped...
We rely on our visual system to cope with the vast barrage of incoming light patterns and to extract...
We describe recent progress toward defining neuronal cell types in the mouse retina and attempt to e...
We rely on our visual system to cope with the vast barrage of incoming light patterns and to extract...
We rely on our visual system to cope with the vast barrage of incoming light patterns and to extract...
The vertebrate retina is a clearly organized signal-processing system. It contains more than 60 diff...
Parallel processing begins in the retina, where input from photoreceptors is transmitted to 12 types...
Understanding natural vision is one of the fundamental goals of sensory neuroscience. The only part ...
We rely on our visual system to cope with the vast barrage of incoming light patterns and to extract...
A computational model of visual processing in the vertebrate retina provides a unified explanation o...
The retina is a remarkable piece of neural tissue, providing the gateway through which all visual in...
AbstractGanglion cells convey information from the retina back to the brain. Recent experiments have...
All visual experiences of the vertebrates begin with light being converted into electrical signals b...