Parvocellular cell

[citation needed] The parvocellular neurons of the visual system receive their input from midget cells, a type of retinal ganglion cell, whose axons comprise the optic tract.

These synapses occur in one of the four dorsal parvocellular layers of the lateral geniculate nucleus.

The information from each eye is kept separate at this point, and continues to be segregated until processing in the visual cortex.

The electrically-encoded visual information leaves the parvocellular cells via relay cells in the optic radiations, traveling to the primary visual cortex layer 4C-β.

The parvocellular neurons are sensitive to colour,[1] and are more capable of discriminating fine details than their magnocellular counterparts.

Schematic diagram of the primate LGN.