John Dowling's The Retina, published in 1987, quickly became the most widely recognized introduction to the structure and function of retinal cells. In this revised edition, Dowling draws on twenty-five years of new research to produce an interdisciplinary synthesis focused on how retinal function contributes to our understanding of brain mechanisms.
The retina is a part of the brain pushed out into the eye during development. It retains many characteristics of other brain regions and hence has yielded significant insights on brain mechanisms. Visual processing begins there as a result of neuronal interactions in two synaptic layers that initiate an analysis of space, color, and movement. In humans, visual signals from 126 million photoreceptors funnel down to one million ganglion cells that convey at least a dozen representations of a visual scene to higher brain regions.
The revised edition calls attention to general principles applicable to all vertebrate retinas, while showing how the visual needs of different animals are reflected in their retinal variations. It includes completely new chapters on color vision and retinal degenerations and genetics, as well as sections on retinal development and visual pigment biochemistry, and presents the latest knowledge and theories on how the retina is organized anatomically, physiologically, and pharmacologically.
The clarity of writing and illustration that made The Retina a book of choice for a quarter century among graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, vision researchers, and teachers of upper-level courses on vision is retained in Dowling's new easy-to-read revised edition.
Preface to the Revised Edition
Preface (1987)
1. Approaches to the Brain
Invertebrates: Simpler Nervous Systems
Vertebrates: The Visual System
The Approachable Retina
Retinal Development and Evolution
2. Retinal Cells and Information Processing
Cellular Organization
Classification of Retinal Neurons
Photoreceptor Cells
Horizontal Cells
Bipolar Cells
Amacrine Cells
Interplexiform Cells
Ganglion Cells
Retinal Processing
Ganglion Cell Receptive Fields
3. Wiring of the Retina
Retinal Synapses
Conventional Synapses
Ribbon Synapses
Basal Junctions
Gap Junctions
Other Junctions
Synaptic Organization
Outer Plexiform Layer
Photoreceptor Terminals
Horizontal Cells
Interplexiform Cells
Inner Plexiform Layer
Bipolar Cells
Amacrine Cells
Centrifugal Fibers
Glial Cells
Müller Cells
Astrocytes and Microglia
Comparative Aspects of Synaptic Organization
Physiological Correlations
Generalized Schemes of the Synaptic Organization of the Vertebrate Retina
Central Primate Retina
4. Neuronal Responses
Intracellular Recordings
Receptors: Light Responses and Their Interactions
Horizontal Cells: Electrical Coupling and Receptive Field Size
Bipolar Cells: Center-Surround Organization
Amacrine Cells: Transient and Sustained Responses
Interplexiform Cells
Ganglion Cells
Functional Organization of the Retina
On- and Off-center Ganglion Cells
Directionally Selective Ganglion Cells
Intrinsically Light-Sensitive Ganglion Cells
Generation of Other Types of Ganglion Cell Receptive Fields and Responses
5. Synaptic Mechanisms and Chemistry
Distal Retinal Synaptic Mechanisms
Retinal Neurotransmission
Photoreceptors and L-Glutamate
Horizontal Cells
Bipolar Cells
Amacrine Cells
GABA and Glycine
Neuromodulation
Monoamines and Dopamine
Dopaminergic Interplexiform Cells in Teleosts
Diverse Effects of Dopamine
Unconventional Neuromodulators
Cannabinoids
Peptides
6. Photoreceptor Mechanisms and Visual Adaptation
Discovery of the Visual Pigments
Vision and Vitamin A
The Action of Light and Visual Pigment Intermediates
Regeneration of Visual Pigments
Phototransduction
Visual Adaptation
Photochemical Dark Adaptation
Photoreceptor Light Adaptation
Network Mechanisms
7. Color Vision
Cones and Color Vision
Evolution of Color Vision
Color Blindness
Visual Pigment Gene Families
Neural Processing of Color
Red/Green Opponency
Blue/Yellow Opponency
Color Mechanisms in Other Species
8. Retinal Degenerations, Electroretinography, and Genetics
Nutritional Night Blindness and Vitamin A Deficiency
Studying Retinal Degenerations: The Electroretinogram
The b-Wave
The a-Wave
The c-Wave
Minor Components: The Oscillatory Potentials
Inherited Retinal Degenerations
Retinitis Pigmentosa
Animal Models
Inducing Retinal Mutations
Chemical Screens
Conclusions
9. Retinal and Brain Mechanisms
Local-Circuit Neurons
Graded-Potential Neurons
Electrical Coupling
Neurotransmitters and Neuromodulators
Novel Synaptic Mechanisms
Receptive Field Mechanisms
Unsolved Problems and the Future
Epilogue
References
Index
John E. Dowling is Gordon and Llura Gund Professor of Neurosciences at Harvard University, and Professor of Ophthalmology (Neuroscience) at Harvard Medical School. A member of the National Academy of Sciences, The American Philosophical Society, and The American Academy of Arts and Sciences, he also has won The Helen Keller Prize for Vision Research, the Paul Kayser International Eye Research Award of the International Society for Eye Research, and the Glenn A. Fry Medal in Physiological Optics.
"John Dowling's The Retina has been the most well-known and widely read introduction to the structure and function of retinal cells and circuits. This revised edition provides exciting new insights about the retina. This is a 'must read' for all retinal researchers."
– Botond Roska, M.D., Ph.D., Senior Group Leader, Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research.
"Most attempts at generalizations about the retina require seemingly endless qualifications, not because of the retina's complexity, but because of the extensive number of experimental preparations used to study it, from hagfish to human, from tissue culture to in vivo preparations. Yet the advantage of studying the retina is that its output can be related directly to its natural input and this input can be controlled exquisitely. This is the take-home message of John Dowling's highly worthwhile and successful revision of his classic work. Like the first edition in its emphasis on an interdisciplinary approach, the new edition of The Retina offers the best overview available of what we know about the functional organization of the retina."
– Stephen Yazulla, Ph.D., Professor of Neurobiology and Behavior, Professor of Ophthalmology, Stony Brook University