Simple cells display a specific adaptation aftereffect
when tested with drifting gratings. The onset of the response
to each cycle of the grating is delayed after adapting,
but the offset is unaffected. Testing with stationary bars
whose luminance was modulated in time revealed that aftereffects
occur only at certain points in both space and time. The
aftereffects seen with moving stimuli were predicted from
those seen with stationary stimuli. These adaptation experiments
suggest a model that consists of mutually inhibitory simple
cells that are in spatiotemporal quadrature. The inhibition
is appropriately localized in space and time to create
the observed aftereffects. In this model, inhibition onto
direction-selective simple cells arises from simple cells
with the same preferred direction.