Hyperacuity

Hyperacuity in Cat Retinal Ganglion Cells

Robert M. Shapley and Jonathan D. Victor

Science 231, 999-1002 (1986)

Abstract

Cat X retinal ganglion cells that can only resolve 2.5 c/deg sine grating patterns nevertheless can respond reliably to displacements of a grating of approximately 1 minute of arc. This is a form of hyperacuity comparable in magnitude to that seen in human vision. A theoretical analysis of this form of hyperacuity reveals that it is a result of the high gain and low noise of ganglion cells. The hyperacuity expected for the best retinal ganglion cells is substantially better than that observed in behavioral experiments. Thus the brain, rather than improving on the retinal signal-to-noise ratio by pooling signals from many ganglion cells, is unable to make use of all the hyperacuity information present in single ganglion cell responses.


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