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The Brain and Seeing

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Title: The Brain and Seeing


1
Chapter 4
  • The Brain and Seeing

2
Optic Nerve
  • The optic nerve of each eye is a bundle of more
    than a million fibers carrying information from
    the eyes to various processing nerves in the
    brain.
  • All neural processing of visual information
    within the brain depends on the optic nerves for
    input data.

3
Optic Nerve
  • The optic nerves of the two eyes converge at the
    optic chiasm.
  • Ipsilateral fibers from each eye project to the
    same side of the brain.
  • Contralateral fibers cross to the opposite side
    of the brain.

4
Optic Nerve
  • Optic tracts are combinations of crossed fibers
    from one eye with uncrossed fibers of other eye.
  • Optic tracts run from the chiasm to structures
    deeper in the brain.

5
Visual Pathways
6
Superior Colliculus
  • Cells in the superior colliculus have poorly
    defined ON-OFF regions and respond to any visual
    stimulus.
  • Cells in the superior colliculus are involved in
    controlling eye movements.

7
Superior Colliculus
  • Superior colliculus contains multisensory cells
    that respond when visual and auditory stimuli
    occur together in space.
  • Multisensory cells in the superior colliculus
    enable organism to detect location of weak
    environmental stimuli.

8
Lateral Geniculate Nucleus
  • Lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) is involved in
    more detailed analysis of visual stimuli.
  • LGN is a multilayered structure the number of
    layers varies by species.

9
Structure of the LGN
  • First two layers of the LGN are the magnocellular
    layers.
  • Layers 3, 4, 5, and 6 of the LGN are the
    parvocellular layers.

10
Structure of the LGN
  • Fibers of the optic tract become segregated when
    they reach the LGN.
  • Contralateral fibers contact layers 1, 4, and 6
    of the LGN.
  • Ipsilateral fibers contact layers 2, 3, and 5.
  • Each layer of the LGN contains a retinotopic map
    that preserves the topography of the retina.

11
Field Properties of P and M LGN Cells
  • Some P cells are color opponent cells that
    respond most strongly when their center and
    surround are stimulated by different colors.
  • P cells analyze spatial information at a finer
    level of detail than do M cells.

12
Visual Cortex
  • Visual cortex is located in occipital lobe at the
    back of the cerebral hemispheres.

13
Visual Cortex
  • Scotomas are patches of blindness within the
    visual field.

14
Visual Cortex
  • Cortical magnification is distortion in which
    representation of the fields center is highly
    exaggerated.

15
Retinal Maps in the Cortex
  • Each cortical cell responds to stimulation of the
    restricted area of the retina that constitutes
    that cells receptive field.
  • The receptive fields of cells in each hemisphere
    of the V1 form a topographic map of the
    contralateral visual field.

16
A single cortical cell response to bars of
various orientations
17
Functional Properties of Cortical Cells
  • Orientation selectivity cortical cell will
    respond only if the orientation of an edge or
    line falls within a narrow range.
  • Simple cell there is simple relationship between
    the receptive field layout of a cortical cell and
    its preferred stimulus.

18
Functional Properties of Cortical Cells
  • Complex cell precise location is not as
    important as long as stimulus remains properly
    oriented within its receptive field.

19
Functional Properties of Cortical Cells
  • Hypercomplex cell maximum response is to an
    appropriately oriented bar whose length and width
    fits the receptive field.

20
Functional Properties of Cortical Cells
  • Oblique effect horizontal and vertical lines can
    be detected more easily and identified more
    rapidly than can obliquely oriented lines.
  • Most people experience the oblique effect, but
    those with astigmatism may show the opposite
    tendency and see oblique lines more clearly.

21
Functional Properties of Cortical Cells
  • Direction selectivity one cell might respond
    when a vertical contour moved from left to right
    but be unresponsive if contour moved in the
    opposite direction.
  • A different cell might respond only to a contour
    moving in the opposite direction.
  • Motion aftereffect

22
Functional Properties of Cortical Cells
  • Monocular segregation gives way to binocular
    integration when cells in layer 4 send signals to
    other cortical layers immediately above them.

23
Functional Properties of Cortical Cells
  • Ocular dominance is when one cell responds more
    vigorously to stimulation of one eye than to the
    other.
  • Any cell that can be excited through both eyes
    regardless of its ocular dominance is called a
    binocular cell.

24
Columns and Hypercolumns
25
Visual Processing Beyond Area V1
  • Neural information from visual area V1 is
    distributed over a number of pathways to higher
    visual areas of the brain.
  • Every cortical region receiving input from
    another region also sends feedback connections
    back to that other region.
  • Parietal stream, or dorsal stream, consists of
    visual areas laid out along a trajectory leading
    from occipital to parietal brain regions.
  • Temporal stream, or ventral stream, comprises a
    network of visual areas spanning the occipital
    and temporal lobes.

26
P and M Cell Contributions to Vision
27
Specialized Visual Areas in Human Vision
  • Achromatopsia (loss of color vision)

28
Specialized Visual Areas in Human Vision
  • Prosopagnosia (inability to recognize faces)

29
Specialized Visual Areas in Human Vision
  • Akinetopsia
  • (inability to see motion)
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