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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Image quality of the cat eye measured during retinal ganglion cell experiments.

A. B. Bonds, +2 more
- 01 Jan 1972 - 
- Vol. 220, Iss: 2, pp 383-401
TLDR
The modulation transfer function of the dioptrics of fifteen cat eyes was determined and each MTF was used to calculate the light distribution within the retinal image of stimuli of various geometry used in experiments on retinal ganglion cells in the same eye.
Abstract
1. The modulation transfer function (MTF) of the dioptrics of fifteen cat eyes was determined. The aerial image, formed by the eye of a standard object (a 0.5-1.0 degrees annulus), was photographed. The transmission of the film negative was measured with a scanning microdensitometer to yield the light distribution within the aerial image. Correcting for the double passage, this experimentally determined light distribution and the known object light distribution were used to obtain the MTF, applying Fourier methods. Each MTF was used to calculate the light distribution within the retinal image of stimuli of various geometry used in experiments on retinal ganglion cells in the same eye.2. When the eye was equipped with an artificial pupil of the same size as that used in the neurophysiological experiments (4.0-4.8 mm diam.) the MTF had fallen to 0.5 at 2.43 c/deg. When the pupil was removed the MTF had fallen to 0.5 at a much lower spatial frequency (1.0 c/deg). This shows that even when one uses an artificial pupil too large to provide optimal image quality there is a vast improvement over using no pupil.3. These image quality measurements were prompted by the need to know the actual stimulus image in experiments on the functional organization of the receptive field, a need exemplified in this paper by a few specific physiological results. The full neurophysiological results appear in the next two papers.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The contrast sensitivity of the cat

TL;DR: The experiments were carried out on pretrigeminal cats and showed good results in terms of the ability to discriminate between male and femalevolent cats, as well as on the behaviour of males and females of the same type.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visual resolution in the cat.

TL;DR: The ability of cats to resolve spatial detail was determined behaviourally by conditioning the animals to suppress a food-rewarded response in the presence of a grating pattern, which displays the high- and low-frequency attenuation which characterizes the human function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cat retinal ganglion cells: size and shape of receptive field centres.

TL;DR: Receptive field centres of 144 sustained and transient retinal ganglion cells were mapped in cats under light pentobarbitone anaesthesia and showed marked changes in the behaviour of these cells in the presence of light and under anaesthesia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Response of Visual Cortical Neurons of the cat to moving sinusoidal gratings: response-contrast functions and spatiotemporal interactions.

TL;DR: Responses to moving sinusoidal gratings, whose spatial frequency, velocity, and contrast were varied systematically, indicated that knowledge of one spatial an .d one temporal curve of a cell allows one to calcu late its response to any combination of spatial and temporal frequencies.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Optical and retinal factors affecting visual resolution.

TL;DR: An improved version of the well-known interference fringe technique which theoretically allows a sinusoidal pattern of very high contrast to be formed directly on the retina to be obtained without prior modification by the optics of the eye is reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical quality of the human eye.

TL;DR: Optical quality of the eye was measured at eight pupil sizes between 1·5 and 6·6 mm diameter by recording the faint light emerging from the eye; this light was reflected from the bright image of a thin line on the fundus.
Journal ArticleDOI

Some quantitative aspects of the cat's eye: axis and plane of reference, visual field co-ordinates and optics

TL;DR: The present study grew out of an investigation into the projection of the visual fields on the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) in the cat to examine many of the basic problems inherent in the idea of topographical localization in the visual system.
Journal ArticleDOI

The spatial selectivity of the visual cells of the cat.

TL;DR: Micro‐electrode recordings have been made from single units in the visual cortex of the cat, during stimulation by moving grating patterns generated on a cathode ray tube.