Figure 2. Computations performed by the retina and their underlying microcircuitsA: Detection of dim light flashes in the rod-to-rod bipolar pathway.Left: Rod bipolar cells pool over many rod photoreceptors, which show distinct responses to single-photon activation embedded in noise. Bipolar cell potentials are not swamped by the accumulated noise in all rods, but instead show distinct activations from single photons, as shown by the voltage traces from a simple model simulation.Right: The important elements of the corresponding retinal microcircuitry. Each photoreceptor output is sent through a band-pass temporal filter followed by a thresholding operation before summation by the rod bipolar cell (Field and Rieke, 2002). Notation for this and all circuit diagrams: triangle = neuron; rectangle = temporal filter function; oval = instantaneous rectifier; closed/open circle = sign-preserving/inverting synapse.B: Sensitivity to texture motion.Left: Y-type ganglion cells show activation when a fine grating shifts in either direction over the receptive field (circle), even though the average illumination remains constant.Right: The underlying microcircuit. Each shift of the grating excites some bipolar cells and inhibits others. The bipolar cells have biphasic dynamics (see impulse response in inset) and thus respond transiently. Only the depolarized bipolar cells communicate to the ganglion cell, because of rectification in synaptic transmission. Thus the ganglion cell fires transiently on every shift (Hochstein and Shapley, 1976).C: Detection of differential motion.Left: An object-motion-sensitive ganglion cell remains silent under global motion of the entire image, but fires when the image patch in its receptive field moves differently from the background.Right: The circuitry behind this computation is based on similar elements as the Y-cell (panel B). Rectification of bipolar cell signals in the receptive field center creates sensitivity to motion. Polyaxonal amacrine cells in the periphery are excited by the same motion-sensitive circuit and send inhibitory inputs to the center. If motion in the periphery is synchronous with that in the center, the excitatory transients will coincide with the inhibitory ones, and firing is suppressed (Ölveczky et al., 2003; Baccus et al., 2008).D: Detection of approaching motion.Left: A certain type of retinal ganglion cell responds strongly to the visual pattern of an approaching dark object, as indicated by the schematic spike train below, but only weakly to lateral object motion.Right: The circuit that generates this approach sensitivity is composed of excitation from OFF bipolar cells and inhibition from amacrine cells that are activated by ON bipolar cells, at least partly via gap junction coupling. Importantly, these inputs are organized in subfields whose signals are nonlinearly rectified before integration by the ganglion cell (Münch et al., 2009).E: Rapid encoding of spatial structures with spike latencies.Left: Specific retinal ganglion cells encode the structure of a new image by their spike latencies. Cells with receptive fields (circles) in a dark region fire early, those in a bright region fire late. Cells whose receptive fields contain both dark and bright produce intermediate latencies and thus encode the boundary in their synchronous firing.Right: The responses result from a circuit that combines synaptic inputs from both ON and OFF bipolar cells whose signals are individually rectified. The timing differences in the responses follow from a delay (Δt) in the ON pathway (Gollisch and Meister, 2008a).F: Switching circuit.Left: A control signal selectively gates one of two potential input signals.Right: In the retina, such a control signal is driven by certain wide-field amacrine cells (A1), which are activated during rapid image shifts in the periphery. Their activation leads to a suppression of OFF bipolar signals and, through a putative local amacrine cell (A2), to disinhibition of ON bipolar signals (Geffen et al., 2007).