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. 1974 Dec;243(3):777–795. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.1974.sp010777

Optical quality of the living cat eye

A B Bonds
PMCID: PMC1330735  PMID: 4449081

Abstract

1. The optical quality of the living cat eye was measured under conditions similar to those of cat retinal ganglion cell experiments by recording the aerial image of a nearly monochromatic thin line of light.

2. Experiments were performed to assess the nature of the fundal reflexion of the cat eye, which was found to behave essentially as a diffuser.

3. The optical Modulation Transfer Function (MTF) was calculated from the measured aerial linespread using Fourier mathematics; the MTF of a `typical' cat eye was averaged from data collected from ten eyes.

4. The state of focus of the optical system, the pupil size and the angle of the light incident on the eye were all varied to determine their effect on image quality.

5. By using an image rotator, the aerial linespread was measured for several orientations of the line; these measurements yielded an approximation of the two-dimensional pointspread completely characterizing the optical system.

6. Evidence is reviewed to show that the optical resolution of the cat, albeit some 3-5 times worse than that of human, appears to be better than the neural resolution of its retina and its visual system as a whole.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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