Rod and cone photoreceptors send their signals to ON-
and OFF-retinal ganglion cells through different pathways
in the primate retina. We hypothesized that increments
and decrements of light may be processed differently by
the rod-bipolar pathway because of the funneling of the
rod signal through the rod bipolar cell. We tested this
hypothesis using a psychophysical adaptation paradigm,
which has provided evidence that photopic increments and
decrements of light are processed by ON- and OFF-pathways
in the human visual system. We had observers adapt to either
a rapid-on or rapid-off sawtooth waveform, under both photopic
and scotopic conditions. We then measured detection thresholds
for one cycle of a rapid-on or rapid-off sawtooth stimulus.
For photopic stimuli, sawtooth adaptation asymmetrically
raised thresholds for test stimuli in a manner that depended
on the polarity of the adaptation stimulus. For scotopic
stimuli, thresholds were raised, but no significant selective
adaptation effect was found. By repeating the photopic
condition with sawtooth stimuli which had been filtered
using an impulse response function derived for the rod
system, we demonstrated that the lack of selective adaptation
was not a consequence of the sluggish temporal response
of the rod-bipolar pathway. We conclude instead that the
reduced effectiveness of sawtooth adaptation is due to
channeling of rod photoreceptor signals through the rod
bipolar cell before reaching ON- and OFF-ganglion cells.