Cell-type specific repertoire of responses to natural scenes in primate retinal ganglion cells
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At least 20 distinct retinal ganglion cells (RGC) types have been identified morphologically in the primate retina, but our understanding of the distinctive visual messages they send to various targets in the brain remains limited. Here, we use large-scale multi-electrode array recordings to examine how multiple functionally-distinct RGC types in the macaque retina respond to flashed natural images. Responses to white noise visual stimulation were used to functionally identify 936 RGCs of 12 types in three recordings. Each cell type was confirmed by the mosaic organization of receptive fields, and 7 cell types were cross-identified between recordings. The average kinetics of light response in each RGC type as well as the repertoire of distinct firing patterns that each type produces were examined across thousands of natural images. The kinetics of the average response across images were highly stereotyped among cells of each cell type and distinct for cells of different types. Moreover, the full repertoires of firing patterns produced by different cell types, assessed by their latency and duration, were generally quite distinct with only a few exceptions. Together these data provide an overview of the range of responses to natural images transmitted from the primate retina to the brain.