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It is in the receptors of the vertebrate retina that the
characteristic visual process - the transduction of radiational
energy into physiological activtty of a different kind - takes
place. The way these receptors modify or redistribute the incident
radiation and thereby control the light ab sorption by the visual
pigments they contain, is the central theme of this book. As far
back as 1843 Brucke put forward a well-reasoned model for the
optics of a receptor, assuming simple ray optics, and it is already
some forty-seven years since the dependence of receptor sensitivity
on retinal angle of incidence was established experimentally as an
important factor in human vision and as one by which the direction
of alignment of receptors in the living eye might be determined.
But it is to Professor J. M. Enoch, editor and author of several
major contributions to this volume, that we owe the first
experimental demonstration (in 1961) of the wave-mode propa gation
of light in vertebrate visual receptors, as well as the results of
some thirty years devoted research concerned with all questions of
receptor optics, particularly directional sensitivity and receptor
alignment, both for normal vertebrate eyes and for pathologically
modified eyes. His work on the latter has opened up a whole range
of clinical possibilities."
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