Abstract

From the fact that the retina is rather inhomogeneous, it can be inferred that the perception of spatial patterns of appreciable extent will be dependent on the retinal location. Anatomical, electrophysiological and psychophysical findings substantiate the claim that the retina is very inhomogeneous of composition. In order to investigate the influence of this inhomogeneity on the perception of patterns, a model of spatiotemporal signal processing in the retina was developed on the basis of a paradigm for the Weber type adaptation. Such “scaling-ensembles” proved successful in the prediction of spatiotemporal modulation transfer in the human fovea (Koenderink et al., 1971). One prediction of the present model is that certain spatial patterns are optimally detected at well defined retinal locations, dependent on the spatial frequency content of the stimulus. A confrontation of the model's predictions with measurements published by Bryngdahl (1966) enabled us to estimate some of the relevant parameters of the retinal receptive fields as a function of the eccentricity. We obtained estimates that compare reasonably well with previously known values; for instance with values of acuity and anatomical measurements. The present discussion bears relevance on the question of whether the retina is composed of independently tuned spatial frequency filters at any retinal location, or whether the tuning is with respect to the eccentricity.

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