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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2014
The authors of this communication have more especially directed their attention to the problem of the specific effect produced on the retina and optic nerve by the action of light. Numerous hypotheses have been made from time to time by physicists and physiologists; but up to the present date, our knowledge of the subject is without any experimental foundation. For example, Newton, Melloni, and Seebeck, stated that the action of light on the retina consisted of a communication of mere vibrations; Young conjectured that it was a minute intermittent motion of some portion of the optic nerve; Du Bois-Reymond attributed it to an electrical effect; Draper supposed that it depended on a heating effect of the choroid; and Mosier compared it to the action of light on a sensitive photographic plate.