Results 181 to 190 of about 20,302 (212)
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Amacrine cells in the ganglion cell layer of the cat retina
Journal of Comparative Neurology, 1987AbstractFollowing transection of the optic nerve, ganglion cells in the cat retina undergo retrograde degeneration. However, many small profiles (≤ 10 μm) survive in the ganglion cell layer. Previously considered to be neuroglia, there is now substantial evidence that they are displaced amacrine cells.
H, Wässle, M H, Chun, F, Müller
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Starburst amacrine cells of the primate retina
Journal of Comparative Neurology, 1989AbstractA group of readily recognized amacrine cells were observed in Golgi‐impregnated and flat‐mounted macaque, baboon, and human retinas. These cells had roughly circular or oval dendritic fields that were narrowly stratified within the inner plexiform layer (IPL).
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Direction selectivity in a model of the starburst amacrine cell
Visual Neuroscience, 2004The starburst amacrine cell (SBAC), found in all mammalian retinas, is thought to provide the directional inhibitory input recorded in On–Off direction-selective ganglion cells (DSGCs). While voltage recordings from the somas of SBACs have not shown robust direction selectivity (DS), the dendritic tips of these cells display direction-selective ...
John J, Tukker +2 more
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Vision Research, 1983
The neural architecture of on and off pathways in mammalian retina is described, including the development of ideas leading to an understanding of the bisublaminar organization of the inner plexiform layer of the retina which supports these two pathways.
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The neural architecture of on and off pathways in mammalian retina is described, including the development of ideas leading to an understanding of the bisublaminar organization of the inner plexiform layer of the retina which supports these two pathways.
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Brain Research, 1983
Golgi-impregnated 'starburst' amacrine cells share significant morphological features with cholinergic neurons in rabbit retina. They are mirror-symmetrical about the a/b (OFF/ON) sublaminar border of the inner plexiform layer. Type a starburst amacrines have cell bodies in the amacrine cell layer and dendrites in sublamina a, while type b cells have ...
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Golgi-impregnated 'starburst' amacrine cells share significant morphological features with cholinergic neurons in rabbit retina. They are mirror-symmetrical about the a/b (OFF/ON) sublaminar border of the inner plexiform layer. Type a starburst amacrines have cell bodies in the amacrine cell layer and dendrites in sublamina a, while type b cells have ...
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Some Functions of Amacrine Cells
2003In contrast to traditional schemas, amacrine cells make up a major population of neurons in the retina, both quantitatively and in the wide variety of their types. They represent the major input to retinal ganglion cells, occupying a fraction ranging from 70% for alpha cells in the cat and parasol cells in the monkey, to 50% for midget ganglion cells ...
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A marker of early amacrine cell development in rat retina
Developmental Brain Research, 1985Colin J Barnstable
exaly

