Abstract.
A linear analogue network model is proposed to describe the neuronal circuit of the outer retina consisting of cones, horizontal cells, and bipolar cells. The model reflects previous physiological findings on the spatial response properties of these neurons to dim illumination and is expressed by physiological mechanisms, i.e., membrane conductances, gap-junctional conductances, and strengths of chemical synaptic interactions. Using the model, we characterized the spatial filtering properties of the bipolar cell receptive field with the standard regularization theory, in which the early vision problems are attributed to minimization of a cost function. The cost function accompanying the present characterization is derived from the linear analogue network model, and one can gain intuitive insights on how physiological mechanisms contribute to the spatial filtering properties of the bipolar cell receptive field. We also elucidated a quantitative relation between the Laplacian of Gaussian operator and the bipolar cell receptive field. From the computational point of view, the dopaminergic modulation of the gap-junctional conductance between horizontal cells is inferred to be a suitable neural adaptation mechanism for transition between photopic and mesopic vision.
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Received: 20 December 1996 / Accepted in revised form: 16 May 1997
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Yagi, T., Ohshima, S. & Funahashi, Y. The role of retinal bipolar cell in early vision: an implication with analogue networks and regularization theory. Biol Cybern 77, 163–171 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/s004220050377
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004220050377