Author:
ALEXANDER KENNETH R.,LEVINE MICHAEL W.,SUPER BOAZ J.
Abstract
Electroretinogram (ERG) responses of the cone system to a flickering
stimulus can exhibit a cyclic variation in amplitude. This phenomenon of
synchronous period doubling has been attributed to a nonlinear feedback
mechanism within the retina that alters response gain. The aim of the
present study was to investigate intersubject variability in period
doubling in the ERG of the human cone system, and to assess the
implications of this variability for signal processing within the retina.
Period doubling was examined in a group of 12 visually normal subjects,
using sinusoidal full-field flicker and harmonic analysis of the ERG
waveforms. For all subjects, the ERG responses to 32-Hz flicker (a
frequency commonly used clinically) were characterized by a harmonic
component at the stimulus frequency and at higher harmonics that were
integral multiples of the stimulus frequency, as expected. In addition,
six of the subjects showed period doubling at 32 Hz, characterized by
harmonic components at integer multiples of a frequency that was half the
stimulus frequency (the subharmonic). However, the subharmonic itself did
not exceed the noise level. These findings suggest that the subharmonic is
generated prior to or at the site that produces the nonlinear higher
harmonics of the ERG response, and that a subsequent band-pass filter
attenuates this subharmonic. Examination of harmonic components of the
subjects' ERG waveforms at other stimulus frequencies, as well as a
cycle-by-cycle analysis of the ERG waveforms, suggested that individual
differences in period doubling may be due to intersubject variation in the
strength of the hypothesized feedback signal and/or the time constant
of its decay.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
7 articles.
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