Title: Chapter 5 Vision
1Chapter 5 Vision
- How the Brain Processes Visual Information
Module 5.5
Parallel Processing in the Visual Cortex
2Sensation and PerceptionImportant Vocabulary
Terms
- Sensation is the process of receiving,
transducing, and coding stimulus energy in the
world. - Stimulus energy is physical energy, such as
light, sound, heat - Sense organs such as eyes, ears, skin receive
energy
3Sensation and PerceptionImportant Vocabulary
Terms
- Reception the absorption of physical energy by
receptors - Transduction the conversion of physical energy
into electrochemical energy
4Sensation and PerceptionImportant Vocabulary
Terms
- Perception the brains process of organizing and
interpreting sensory information to give it
meaning - Coding a one-to-one communication between an
aspect of a physical stimulus and an aspect of
nervous system activity
5Neuroanatomy Handout 4 The Visual System
- Sclera (A)
- Outermost layer of eye white, fibrous,
protective globe - Cornea (A1) Clear disk at front of eye focuses
light rays onto the receptor cells at back of eye
(retina) - Aqueous humor (B) Fluid in the very front of the
eyeball refracts light rays onto retina
6Neuroanatomy Handout 4 The Visual System
- Iris (C) Colored part in center of eye ring
of muscles that controls amount of light that
gets into eye - Pupil (D) Opening in center of eye (appears
black) constricts or dilates with movement of
iris
7Neuroanatomy Handout 4 The Visual System
- Lens (E) Along with cornea, focuses light onto
receptor cells - Vitreous humor (F) Fluid filling majority of
eyeball refracts lightwaves - Retina (G) lined with visual receptor cells,
rods and cones
8Neuroanatomy Handout 4 The Visual System
- Rods (I) - most abundant in the periphery of the
eye - 120 million per retina
- respond to faint light
- Cones (J) - most abundant in and around the fovea
- 6 million per retina
- essential for color vision, which requires bright
light - Photopigments chemicals released by rods and
cones when struck by light
9Neuroanatomy Handout 4 The Visual System
- The fovea (G2) central portion of the human
retina which allows for acute and detailed
vision. - Packed tight with receptor cells
10Neuroanatomy Handout 4 The Visual System
- Rods and cones are located in the outmost layer
of the eye. - They communicate their messages to neurons called
bipolar cells (K) and horizontal cells, which are
located closer to the center of the eye. - Bipolar cells send messages to ganglion cells (L)
and amacrine cells that are even closer to the
center of the eye.
11Neuroanatomy Handout 4 The Visual System
- Axons of ganglion cells (L1) join one another to
form the optic nerve. - The optic nerve (L2) exits through the back of
the eye and travels to the brain.
12Neuroanatomy Handout 4 The Visual System
- Blind spot (G1) The point at which the optic
nerve leaves the back of the eye - it contains no receptor cells
- It does contain retinal veins and arteries (H)
13Visual Coding and the Retinal Receptors
- Perception of color is dependent upon the
wavelength of the light.
14Visual Coding and the Retinal Receptors
- Visible wavelengths depend upon species
receptors. - Human range 350 nanometers (violet, short
wavelength) to 700 nanometers (red, long
wavelength). - Some species can detect ultraviolet light
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16Visual Coding and the Retinal Receptors
- Discrimination among colors depends upon the
combination of responses by different neurons. - Two major interpretations of color vision
- Trichromatic theory/Young-Helmholtz theory
- Opponent-process theory
17Visual Coding and the Retinal Receptors
- Trichromatic theory - Color perception occurs
through the ratio of activity across the three
types of cones - short wavelength
- medium-wavelength
- long-wavelength
18Visual Coding and the Retinal Receptors
- More intense light increases the brightness of
the color but does not change the ratio and thus
does not change the perception of the color
itself.
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20Visual Coding and the Retinal Receptors
- The opponent-process theory (Ewald Hering)
suggests that we perceive color in terms of
paired opposites. - white/black
- red/green
- yellow/blue
- A possible mechanism for the theory is that
bipolar cells are excited by one set of
wavelengths and inhibited by another.
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23Negative color afterimage
24Visual Coding and the Retinal Receptors
- The opponent-process and trichromatic theories
cant explain - Color constancy, the ability to recognize color
despite changes in lighting. - Retinex theory suggests the cortex compares
information from various parts of the retina to
determine the brightness and color for each area.
25Visual Coding and the Retinal Receptors
- Color vision deficiency impairment in perceiving
color differences - X-linked trait
- Causes
- lack of a type of cone
- cone has abnormal properties
- Most common form difficulty distinguishing
between red and green
26The Neural Basis of Visual Perception
- Ganglion cell axons form the optic nerve.
27- Optic chiasm place where the two optic nerves
meet. - In humans, half of the axons from each eye cross
to the other side of the brain. - Most axons go to the lateral geniculate nucleus,
a smaller amount to the superior colliculus and
fewer go to other areas.
28- Visual field the whole area of the world that
you can see at a given time - Receptive field the portion of the visual field
to which any one neuron responds
29Eyes Rightby Oliver Sacks
- From The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat
30The Neural Basis of Visual Perception
- Some people with damage to the primary visual
cortex (V1) show blindsight, an ability to
respond to visual stimuli that they report not
seeing.
31The Neural Basis of Visual Perception
- Visual agnosia is the inability to recognize
objects despite satisfactory vision. - Caused by damage to the pattern pathway usually
in the temporal cortex. - Video link (1.5m)
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vrwQpaHQ0hYwfeature
related - Prosopagnosia is the inability to recognize
faces. - Occurs after damage to the fusiform gyrus of the
inferior temporal cortex. - Video link (5.5m)
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vXLGXAiSpN00feature
fvw
32The Neural Basis of Visual Perception
- The visual system has neural plasticity
- Blind Learn to See with Tongue, video link
(3m) - https//www.youtube.com/watch?vOKd56D2mvN0