A quantitative study of the time course of development of the percentage of orientationally selective and isotropic ganglion cells in turtle retina has recently been performed. This study revealed that as soon as ganglion cells start responding to light, a large percentage of them are selective to the orientations of moving visual stimuli. This percentage decreases with age to reach a minimum around hatching, increases dramatically after birth and finally, decreases again following the first month of life to reach adult level. Concomitantly, the percentage of cells responding isotropically to the orientation of elongated stimuli increases monotonically until about 30 days after birth, stabilizing afterwards. To account for both time courses, we propose a biophysical model implementing features ubiquitous to developing vertebrate retinas. These features include early dendritic and synaptic spatial polarization, dendritic growth, and waves of activity generated spontaneously or by visual stimulation sweeping across the inner plexiform layer (IPL). The model also assumes a physiologically plausible Hebbian rule, which includes long-term potentiation and depression. Computer simulations of this model yield good fits of the data. The quality of these fits confirms and extends results from an earlier model using computationally-simple mechanisms, which suggested that early dendritic polarization might be the seed for mature orientation selectivity. (C) 1998 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.