Switching night vision on or off

Neurobiologists at the FMI have been able to dissect a mechanism in the retina that facilitates our ability to see both in the dark and in the light. They identified a cellular switch that activates distinct neuronal circuits at a defined light level. The switch cells of the retina act quickly and reliably to turn on and off computations suited specifically for vision in low and high light levels thus facilitating the transition from night to day vision. The scientists have published their results online in Neuron. "It was fascinating to see how modern neurobiological methods allowed us to answer a question about vision that has been controversially discussed for the last 50 years", said Karl Farrow, postdoctoral fellow in Botond Roska's group at the Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research. Since the late 1950 scientists debated how the retina handles the different visual processes at low and high light intensities, at starlight and at daylight. Farrow and his colleagues have now identified a cellular switch in the retina that controls perception during these two settings.
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