“…Like the standard DS cells investigated here, the mammalian ON DS cells also comprise three subtypes: one with preferred direction along the nasal-temporal axis and the other two with preferred directions rotated by 120°from that axis (Oyster and Barlow, 1967;Sun et al, 2006). Because of their tuning to slow velocities (Oyster, 1968;Wyatt and Day, 1975;Sivyer et al, 2010) and their projections to the accessory optic system (Simpson, 1984), ON DS cells are thought to be important for image stabilization by encoding the direction of slow full-field motion (Vaney et al, 2001;Dhande et al, 2013;Yonehara et al, 2016), analogous to the function hypothesized here for standard DS cells in the salamander retina. However, we did not find any strong velocity tuning for either type of DS cells analyzed here, as all cells responded well to a fairly broad range of velocities (Fig.…”