Title: Occipital Lobes
1Bryan Kolb Ian Q. Whishaws
Fundamentals of Human Neuropsychology, Sixth
Edition Chapter 13 Lecture PPT
Prepared by Gina Mollet, Adams State College
2The Occipital Lobes
3Portrait An Injured Soldiers Visual World
- P.M.
- Struck by a bullet in the back of his brain
- Lost sight in the right visual field
- Could accurately guess about the presence or
absence of light - Difficulty reading and recognizing faces
4Anatomy of the Occipital Lobes
- No clear division on lateral surface of brain
- Medial Surface
- Parieto-occipital surface
- Calcarine Sulcus
- Contains much of primary visual cortex
- Separates upper and lower visual fields
- Ventral Surface
- Lingual gyrus
- V2 and VP
- Fusiform gyrus
- V4
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6Subdivisions of the Occipital Cortex
- Map based on monkey occipital cortex
7Subdivisions of the Occipital Cortex
- Roger Tootell
- Map of human cortex
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9Subdivisions of the Occipital Cortex
- Area V1
- Laminar organization most distinct of all
cortical areas - Heterogenous
- Has more than one distinct function
- Preserved in V2
- Striate cortex
- Another name for visual cortex due to its striped
appearance
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12Subdivisions of the Occipital Cortex
- Color Vision
- Primary job of V4, but distributed throughout
occipital cortex - Plays a role in detection of movement, depth, and
position
13Connections of the Visual Cortex
- Connections
- Primary Visual Cortex (V1)
- Input from LGN
- Output to all other levels
- Secondary Visual Cortex (V2)
- Output to all other levels
- After V2
- Output to the parietal lobe - Dorsal Stream
- Output to the inferior temporal lobe - Ventral
Stream - Output to the superior temporal sulcus (STS) -
STS Stream
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15Visual Pathways
- Dorsal Stream
- Visual Guidance of Movements
- Ventral Stream
- Object Perception
- STS
- Visuospatial functions
16A Theory of Occipital Lobe Function
- Vision begins in V1 (primary visual cortex), that
is heterogeneous, and then travels to more
specialized cortical zones - Selective lesions up the hierarchy produce
specific visual deficits - Lesions to V1 are not aware of seeing
17Visual Functions Beyond the Occipital Lobe
- Vision-related areas in the brain make up about
55 of the total cortex - Multiple visual regions in the temporal,
parietal, and frontal lobes - Vision
- Not unitary, composed of many quite specific
forms of processing - Five categories for vision
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19Five Categories of Vision
- Vision for Action
- Parietal Visual Areas in the Dorsal Stream
- Reaching
- Ducking
- Catching
- Action for Vision
- Visual Scanning
- Eye Movements and Selective Attention
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22Categories of Vision
- Visual Recognition
- Temporal Lobes
- Object Recognition
- Visual Space
- Parietal and Temporal Lobes
- Spatial location
- Location of an object relative to person
(egocentric space) - Location of an object relative to another
(allocentric space)
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24Categories of Vision
- Visual Attention
- Selective attention for specific visual input
- Parietal lobes guide movements and temporal lobes
help in object recognition
25Visual Pathways Beyond the Occipital Lobe
- Milner and Goodale
- The dorsal stream is a set of systems for on-line
visual control of action - Evidence
- Visual neurons in the parietal cortex are active
only when the brain acts on visual information - 3 pathways run from V1 to the parietal cortex,
must be functionally dissociable - Visual impairments after parietal lesions can be
characterized as visuomotor or orientational
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27Visual Pathways Beyond the Occipital Lobe
- STS stream
- Characterized by polysensory neurons
- Neurons are responsive to both auditory and
visual input or both visual and somatosensory
input - Originates from structures in the parietal and
temporal cortex
28Imaging Studies of Dorsal and Ventral Streams
- Haxby and colleagues
- PET study
- Found activation for facial stimuli in the
temporal region and activation during a location
task in the posterior parietal region and frontal
lobes - Detection of motion activated V5, while detection
of shape activated the STS - Color perception activated area V4
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30Disorders of Visual Pathways
- Monocular Blindness
- Loss of sight in one eye
- Results from destruction of the retina or optic
nerve - Bitemporal Hemianopia
- Loss of vision from both temporal fields
- Results from a lesion to the optic chiasm
- Nasal Hemianopia
- Loss of vision of one nasal field
- Results from a lesion of the lateral chiasm
31Disorders of Visual Pathways
- Homonymous Hemianopia
- Blindness of one entire visual field
- Results from a complete cut of the optic tract,
LGN or V1 - Macular sparing
- Sparing of the central or macular region of the
visual field - Results from a lesion to the occipital lobe
32Disorders of Visual Pathways
- Quadrantoanopia or Hemianopia
- Complete loss of vision in one-quarter of the
fovea or in one-half of the fovea - Results from a lesion to the occipital lobe
- Field Defects
- Scotomas - small blind spots
- Results from small lesions to the occipital lobe
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35Disorders of Cortical Function
- B.K. V1 Damage and a Scotoma
- Right infarct (dead tissue) in the occipital lobe
- Experienced blindsight - could perceive location
without perceiving content - Lost one-quarter of the fovea, poor vision in the
upper left quadrant - Slow facial recognition
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37Disorders of Cortical Function
- Case D.B. V1 Damage and Blindsight
- Had an angioma in the right calcarine fissure
- Has a hemianopia
- Cortical Blindness - blindsight in which he
reports no conscious awareness of seeing but can
report movement and location of objects
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39Disorders of Cortical Function
- Case J.I. V4 Damage and Loss of Color Vision
- Sustained a concussion and suddenly lost color
vision - Specific damage in the occipital cortex
- Improved acuity at twilight or at night
- Years later, no longer remembered color
40Disorders of Cortical Function
- Case P.B. Conscious Color Perception in a Blind
Patient - Suffered an ischemia that destroyed large area of
the posterior cortex - Can only detect presence or absence of light and
has intact color vision
41Disorders of Cortical Function
- Case L.M. V5 (MT) Damage and the Perception of
Movement - Vascular abnormality that produced bilateral
posterior damage - Loss of movement vision
- Unable to intercept moving objects by using her
hand
42Disorders of Cortical Function
- Case D.F. Occipital Damage and Visual Agnosia
- Bilateral damage to the LO region and tissue
between the parietal and occipital lobes - Visual form agnosia - inability to recognize line
drawings of objects - Can use visual information to guide movements,
but not to recognize objects
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45Disorders of Cortical Function
- Case V.K. Parietal Damage and Visuomotor
Guidance - Bilateral hemorrhages in the occipitoparietal
regions - Optic Ataxia - Deficit in visually guided hand
movements
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47Disorders of Cortical Function
- Cases D. and T. Higher-Level Visual Processes
- D
- Right occipitotemporal lesion
- Prosopagnosia - Facial recognition deficit
- Could read lips
- T
- Left occipitotemporal lesion
- Alexia - Inability to read
- Impaired lip reading
48Conclusions from Case Studies
- Distinct syndromes of visual disturbance
- Some provide evidence for a fundamental
dissociation between the dorsal and ventral
streams - Visual experience is not unified
- Asymmetry in functions of occipital lobes
49Visual Agnosia
- Object Agnosia
- Apperceptive Agnosia
- Deficit in the ability to develop a percept of
the structure of an object or objects - Simultagnosia
- Unable to perceive more than one object at a time
- Results from bilateral damage to the lateral
parts of the occipital lobes - Associative Agnosia
- Can perceive objects, but cannot identify them
- Results from lesions to the anterior temporal
lobes
50Visual Agnosia
- Other Agnosias
- Prosopagnosia
- Cannot recognize faces
- Can recognize facial features, facial
expressions, and tell human from nonhuman faces - Alexia
- Inability to read
- Form of object agnosia - inability to construct
perceptual wholes from parts or - Form of associative agnosia - word memory is
damaged or inaccessible - Results from damage to the left fusiform and
lingual areas
51Visual Imagery
- Neural structures mediating perception and
visualization are not completely independent - Right hemisphere superiority in mental rotation
- Evidence that the left temporal-occipital region
is responsible for image generation
52Snapshot Generating Mental Images
- Mark DEsposito and colleagues
- What is the neural basis for visual imagery?
- fMRI study
- Found that visualization of concrete words
increases activation in the left posterior
temporal-occipital region - Findings consistent with other imaging studies
and case studies
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