HIGHLIGHTS
- who: Christopher W. Tyler from the Street, San Francisco, USA of Health Sciences, City University of London, London have published the paper: Brain trauma impacts retinal processing: photoreceptor pathway interactions in traumatic light sensitivity, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
- what: Taken as a whole, the present results form an unexpected constellation of retinal effects of brain trauma.
SUMMARY
At higher light levels, rod-driven components are typically slower than cone-driven components, equated for Vol.: Doc Ophthalmol 144:179-190 stimulation (gray box), showing the a-wave (photoreceptor response), b-wave (bipolar . . .
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