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J Physiol Vol 269, Issue 3 pp 517-534
Copyright © 1977 by The Physiological Society
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Rod-cone interaction in light adaptation

M. Latch and P. Lennie*

Institute of Molecular Biophysics, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida, 32306, U.S.A.

1. The increment-threshold for a small test spot in the peripheral visual field was measured against backgrounds that were red or blue.

2. When the background was a large uniform field, threshold over most of the scotopic range depended exactly upon the background's effect upon rods. This confirms Flamant & Stiles (1948). But when the background was small, threshold was elevated more by a long wave-length than a short wave-length background equated for its effect on rods.

3. The influence of cones was explored in a further experiment. The scotopic increment-threshold was established for a short wave-length test spot on a large, short wave-length background. Then a steady red circular patch, conspicuous to cones, but below the increment-threshold for rod vision, was added to the background. When it was small, but not when it was large, this patch substantially raised the threshold for the test.

4. When a similar experiment was made using, instead of a red patch, a short wave-length one that was conspicuous in rod vision, threshold varied similarly with patch size. These results support the notion that the influence of small backgrounds arises in some size-selective mechanism that is indifferent to the receptor system in which visual signals originate. Two corollaries of this hypothesis were tested in further experiments.

5. A small patch was chosen so as to lift scotopic threshold substantially above its level on a uniform field. This threshold elevation persisted for minutes after extinction of the patch, but only when the patch was small. A large patch made bright enough to elevate threshold by as much as the small one gave rise to no corresponding after-effect.

6. Increment-thresholds for a small red test spot, detected through cones, followed the same course whether a large uniform background was long- or short wave-length. When the background was small, threshold upon the short wave-length one began to rise for much lower levels of background illumination, suggesting the influence of rods. This was confirmed by repeating the experiment after a strong bleach when the cones, but not rods, had fully recovered their sensitivity. Increment-thresholds upon small backgrounds of long or short wave-lengths then followed the same course.


* Present address and address for correspondence: Laboratory of Experimental Psychology, University of Sussex. Falmer, Brighton BN1 9QG, England.




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A. G. Shapiro
Cone-Specific Mediation of Rod Sensitivity in Trichromatic Observers
Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci., March 1, 2002; 43(3): 898 - 905.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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