The goal of the present study was to relate the dark and
light-adapted flash sensitivity of the scotopic threshold response
(STR) and rod b-wave of the electroretinogram (ERG)
to behaviorally measured rod increment threshold responses.
Small amplitudes of the dark-adapted STR and b-wave,
the latter after application of NMDA, were found to increase
in proportion to flash intensity. The value obtained for the
sensitivity of the b-wave would be expected if signals
from rods were summed linearly by the rod bipolar cell. The
sensitivity of the STR could not be accounted for in terms of
rod signal convergence as the source of this ERG component is
still unknown. Increment threshold responses of rats were measured
behaviorally in an operant conditioning chamber. At absolute
threshold, on average 1 in 2400 rods were activated by the test
flash. Comparison of the adaptive effects of background lights
on behaviorally measured scotopic sensitivity and rod ERG
sensitivity suggest that the increment threshold sensitivity
of rat is regulated at three different sites in the retina.