Models of ganglion cell topography in the retina of macaque monkeys and their application to sensory cortical scaling.

We devised mathematical models of the topography of ganglion cells in the retina of macaque monkeys. The models consisted of a sum-of-three exponentials function fitted to measurements of ganglion cell density made on the nasal horizontal meridian, combined with known anisotropies across the horizon...

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Main Authors: Azzopardi, P, Cowey, A
Formato: Journal article
Idioma:English
Publicado em: 1996
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author Azzopardi, P
Cowey, A
author_facet Azzopardi, P
Cowey, A
author_sort Azzopardi, P
collection OXFORD
description We devised mathematical models of the topography of ganglion cells in the retina of macaque monkeys. The models consisted of a sum-of-three exponentials function fitted to measurements of ganglion cell density made on the nasal horizontal meridian, combined with known anisotropies across the horizontal and vertical meridians by means of elliptic interpolation to provide a full description of their density across the whole of the retinal surface. Integration using standard numerical techniques allowed the number of ganglion cells in arbitrary regions of the retina to be estimated. The topography of actual and effective total ganglion cell populations, and of primate alpha and gamma retinal ganglion cells, was modelled on previously published data. The models were used to test the hypothesis that the retinal projection to the striate cortex in macaque monkeys is peripherally scaled (i.e. merely reflects the eccentricity-dependent variation in density of ganglion cells in the retina) by comparing the cumulative proportion of ganglion cells with the cumulative proportion of cortical area as a function of eccentricity in the visual field. Discrepancies between the two curves indicated that the fovea and immediately surrounding retina are overrepresented in the striate cortex (i.e. there is more cortex per ganglion cell in and near the fovea than in the periphery), and the fact that the discrepancies persisted out to 25-50 degrees of eccentricity showed that the overrepresentation cannot be explained by the lateral displacement of foveal ganglion cells.
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spelling oxford-uuid:792147e0-72bd-4005-8c2a-5674afca51d32022-03-26T20:35:18ZModels of ganglion cell topography in the retina of macaque monkeys and their application to sensory cortical scaling.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:792147e0-72bd-4005-8c2a-5674afca51d3EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford1996Azzopardi, PCowey, AWe devised mathematical models of the topography of ganglion cells in the retina of macaque monkeys. The models consisted of a sum-of-three exponentials function fitted to measurements of ganglion cell density made on the nasal horizontal meridian, combined with known anisotropies across the horizontal and vertical meridians by means of elliptic interpolation to provide a full description of their density across the whole of the retinal surface. Integration using standard numerical techniques allowed the number of ganglion cells in arbitrary regions of the retina to be estimated. The topography of actual and effective total ganglion cell populations, and of primate alpha and gamma retinal ganglion cells, was modelled on previously published data. The models were used to test the hypothesis that the retinal projection to the striate cortex in macaque monkeys is peripherally scaled (i.e. merely reflects the eccentricity-dependent variation in density of ganglion cells in the retina) by comparing the cumulative proportion of ganglion cells with the cumulative proportion of cortical area as a function of eccentricity in the visual field. Discrepancies between the two curves indicated that the fovea and immediately surrounding retina are overrepresented in the striate cortex (i.e. there is more cortex per ganglion cell in and near the fovea than in the periphery), and the fact that the discrepancies persisted out to 25-50 degrees of eccentricity showed that the overrepresentation cannot be explained by the lateral displacement of foveal ganglion cells.
spellingShingle Azzopardi, P
Cowey, A
Models of ganglion cell topography in the retina of macaque monkeys and their application to sensory cortical scaling.
title Models of ganglion cell topography in the retina of macaque monkeys and their application to sensory cortical scaling.
title_full Models of ganglion cell topography in the retina of macaque monkeys and their application to sensory cortical scaling.
title_fullStr Models of ganglion cell topography in the retina of macaque monkeys and their application to sensory cortical scaling.
title_full_unstemmed Models of ganglion cell topography in the retina of macaque monkeys and their application to sensory cortical scaling.
title_short Models of ganglion cell topography in the retina of macaque monkeys and their application to sensory cortical scaling.
title_sort models of ganglion cell topography in the retina of macaque monkeys and their application to sensory cortical scaling
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