Lecture Overview - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 74
About This Presentation
Title:

Lecture Overview

Description:

The white tissue of the eye. Conjunctiva ... Adjustable opening in the iris that regulates the amount of light that enters the eye. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:56
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 75
Provided by: pauljwe
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Lecture Overview


1
Lecture Overview
  • Sensory coding issues
  • Anatomy of the retina
  • Receptive Fields
  • Organization of striate cortex
  • Feature analysis
  • Spatial frequency analysis
  • Visual association cortex

2
Definitions
  • Afferent vs. efferent
  • Stimulus any energy capable of exciting a
    receptor
  • Mechanical
  • Chemical
  • Thermal
  • Photic
  • Sensory energies are measurable (unlike ESP)

3
Sensory Receptors
  • Receptors specialized nerve cells that transduce
    energy
  • Act as dendrites that eventually induce A.P.s
  • Receptors are mode specific
  • Only detect a small range of energy levels
  • Eye 400-700 nM
  • Ear 20-20,000 Hz
  • Taste buds specific chemicals
  • Law of Specific Nerve Energies

4
  • Anatomy of the Visual System
  • The Eyes
  • Orbits
  • Bony pockets in the front of the skull.
  • Sclera
  • The white tissue of the eye.
  • Conjunctiva
  • Mucous membranes that line the eyelid and protect
    the eye.

5
  • Anatomy of the Visual System
  • The eyes
  • Cornea
  • Transparent outer covering of the eye that admits
    light.
  • Pupil
  • Adjustable opening in the iris that regulates the
    amount of light that enters the eye.
  • Iris
  • Pigmented ring of muscles situated behind the
    cornea.

6
  • Anatomy of the Visual System
  • The eyes
  • Lens
  • Consists of a series of transparent, onion-like
    layers. Its shape can be changed by contraction
    of ciliary muscles.
  • Accommodation
  • Changes in the thickness of the lens,
    accomplished by the ciliary muscles, that focus
    images of near or distant objects on the retina.

7
  • Anatomy of the Visual System
  • The eyes
  • Retina
  • The neural tissue and photoreceptive cells
    located on the inner surface of the posterior
    portion of the eye.
  • Rod
  • Photoreceptor cells of the retina, sensitive to
    the
  • light of low intensity.
  • Cone
  • Photoreceptor cells of the retina maximally
    sensitive to one of three different wavelengths
    of light and hence encodes color vision.

8
  • Anatomy of the Visual System
  • The eyes
  • Fovea
  • Area of retina that mediates the most acute
    vision. Contains only color-sensitive cones.
  • Optic Disk
  • Location on the retina where fibers of ganglion
    cells exit the eye responsible for the blind
    spot.

9
(No Transcript)
10
Receptive Fields
  • Receptive Field (RF) Those attributes of a
    stimulus that will alter the firing rate of
    sensory cell
  • Can measure RF at each level of sensory system
  • There are as many RFs as there are cells in a
    sensory system

11
Sensory System Issues
  • How many synapses (order of system)
  • Degree of decussation (crossover) ?
  • Projects to what area of thalamus?
  • Projects to what area of cortex?
  • Does cortex show topical organization?
  • Does cortex show columnar organization?
  • Modification of sensory coding?
  • Experience, hormones?

12
Visual Systems
  • Function of visual systems is to detect EMR
    emitted by objects
  • Nature of visible light (400-700 nM)
  • Functions of vision
  • Locate figure vs. ground
  • Detect movement (predator/prey?)
  • Detect color (adaptive value of color?)

13
Eye Details
  • An eye consists of
  • Aperture (pin hole, pit, or pupil)
  • Lens or not?
  • Photoreceptive elements (retina)

Source http//www.nei.nih.gov/nei/vision/vision2
.htm
14
(No Transcript)
15
(No Transcript)
16
Cross-section through Retina
  • Light passes through several layers of retina to
    reach the photoreceptors

Source http//insight.med.utah.edu/ WebVision/ima
geswv/husect.jpeg
Light
17
Rods and Cones
Source http//insight.med.utah.edu/Webvision /ima
geswv/rodcoEM.jpeg
  • Rods 120 million
  • Light sensitive (not color)
  • Found in periphery of retina
  • Consist of stacked protein disks
  • Low activation threshold
  • Cones 6 million
  • Are color sensitive
  • Found mostly in fovea
  • One continuous membrane

6.11
18
(No Transcript)
19
Retinal Circuitry
  • Photorec. 1st order
  • Bipolar 2nd order
  • Ganglion cell 3rd order
  • Rods more diffusely connected to bipolar cells

Source Carlson, 5/e, 6.13
20
(No Transcript)
21
Visual Transduction
  • Photopigments
  • Consist of opsin and retinal
  • In the dark, NA channels are open -gt glutamate
    is released
  • Light breaks opsin and retinal apart-gt
  • Activates transducin (G protein)-gt
  • Activates phosphodiesterase-gt
  • Reduces cGMP -gt closes NA channels
  • Net effect light hyperpolarizes the retinal
    receptor

22
(No Transcript)
23
(No Transcript)
24
Receptive Fields Ganglion Cell
  • Ganglion cells exhibit low baseline firing rates
  • Receptive fields circular in shape with
    ring-shaped surround
  • ON-Cell
  • Light placed on center increases firing
  • Light placed on surround decreases firing

OFF
ON
25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
Visual Pathways
  • Within retina
  • Photoreceptor -gt bipolar cell - gt ganglion cell
  • Beyond retina
  • Ganglion cell -gt through optic chiasm -gt lateral
    geniculate -gt primary visual cortex (striate)

28
(No Transcript)
29
Retina-LGN Details
  • Magnocellular system
  • Cells from retina terminate in LGN layers 1,2
  • Carry info on contrast and movement (color
    insensitive)
  • Carry input from A retinal ganglion (Y type)
    cells
  • Parvocellular system
  • Cells from retina terminate in LGN layers 3-6
  • carry info on fine detail, and color
  • Carry input from B retinal ganglion cells (X
    type)

30
(No Transcript)
31
LGN Receptive Fields
  • LGN shows circular receptive fields
  • Size larger for magnocellular than
    parvocellular
  • Color sensitivity only for parvocellular
  • Color receptive fields (circular on-off)
  • e.g. red-on, green-off

32
Cortical Receptive Fields
  • Hubel and Wiesel were interested in the visual
    stimuli that would excite a nerve cell in area 17
  • Anesthetized a cat, inserted microelectrode into
    area 17, recorded AP pattern during presentation
    on stimuli to retina
  • Cells responded to features of visual field
  • Shape
  • Orientation
  • Movement

33
(No Transcript)
34
Complexities of Visual Cortex
  • Columnar Organization (input from same part of
    retina)
  • Ocular dominance cells respond to only one eye
  • Columns for left and right alternate
  • Orientation columns
  • Cells respond to same orientation, adjacent cells
    are shifted by 10 degrees
  • Are at right angle to ocular dominance column
  • Do a 180 degrees in 1 mm
  • Color blobs-stained for cytochrome oxidase
  • -Show up every 0.5 mm (one blob for each eye)
  • Removal of one eye - alternate rows of blobs
    disappear

6.1
35
(No Transcript)
36
(No Transcript)
37
Spatial Frequency?
  • Visual neurons respond to a sine wave grating
  • Alternating patches of light and dark
  • Low f large areas of light and dark
  • High f fine details

38
(No Transcript)
39
Visual Association Cortex
  • From striate cortex (V1) see 2 streams
  • Dorsal where an object is
  • Projects to post. parietal association cortex
  • Ventral what an object is (analysis of form)
  • Projects to extrastriate cortex (V2, V3, V4, V5)
  • and to inferior temporal cortex (TEO, TE, STS)
  • Dorsal mostly magnocellular input
  • Ventral equal mix of magnocellular and
    parvocellular input

40
(No Transcript)
41
Summary of Visual Cortex
  • V1 responds to color, orientation, eye dominance
  • V4 responds to color constancy (and form
    perception)
  • Lesions impair color constancy
  • V5 responds to movement
  • Inf. temporal cortex
  • TEO coding of object features (2-d patterns,
    color)
  • TE recognition of objects (a face or a hand)

42
(No Transcript)
43
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Striate
    Cortex
  • Anatomy of the striate cortex
  • David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel
  • 1960s at Harvard University
  • Discovered that neurons in the visual cortex did
    not simply respond to light they selectively
    responded to specific features of the visual
    world.

44
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Striate
    Cortex
  • Orientation and movement
  • Simple cell
  • An orientation-sensitive neuron in the striate
    cortex whose receptive field is organized in an
    opponent fashion.

45
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Striate
    Cortex
  • Orientation and movement
  • Complex cell
  • A neuron in the visual cortex that responds to
    the presence of a line segment with a particular
    orientation located within its receptive
    field,especially when the line moves
    perpendicular to its orientation.

46
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Striate
    Cortex
  • Orientation and movement
  • Hypercomplex cell
  • A neuron in the visual cortex that responds to
    the presence of a line segment with a particular
    orientation that ends at a particular point
    within a cells receptive field.

47
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Striate
    Cortex
  • Spatial frequency
  • Sine-wave grating
  • A series of straight parallel bands varying
    continuously in the brightness according to a
    sine-wave function, along a line perpendicular to
    their lengths.

48
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Striate
    Cortex
  • Spatial Frequency
  • Spatial frequency
  • The relative width of the bands in a sine-wave
    grating, measured in cycles per degree of visual
    angle.

49
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Striate
    Cortex
  • Retinal Disparity
  • Retinal disparity
  • The fact that points on objects located at
    different distances from the observer will fall
    on slightly different locations on the two
    retinas provides the basis for stereopsis or
    depth perception

50
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Striate
    Cortex
  • Color
  • Cytochrome oxidase (CO) blob
  • The central region of a module of the primary
    visual cortex, revealed by a stain for cytochrome
    oxidase contains wavelength-sensitive neurons
    part of the parvocellular system.

51
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Striate
    Cortex
  • Ocular dominance
  • The extent to which a particular neuron receives
    more input from one eye than from the other.
  • Cortical blindness
  • Blindness caused by damage to the optic
    radiations or primary visual cortex.

52
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Visual
    Association Cortex
  • Extrastriate cortex
  • A region of the visual association cortex
    receives fibers from the striate cortex and from
    the superior colliculi and projects to the
    inferior temporal cortex.
  • Regions respond to particular features of visual
    information such as orientation, movement,
    spatial frequency, retinal disparity, or color.

53
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Visual
    Association Cortex
  • Dorsal stream
  • A system of interconnected regions of the visual
    cortex involved in the perception of spatial
    location, beginning with the striate cortex and
    ending with the posterior parietal cortex.
  • Ventral stream
  • A system of interconnected regions of visual
    cortex involved in the perception of form,
    beginning with the striate cortex and ending with
    the inferior temporal cortex.

54
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Visual
    Association Cortex
  • Color constancy
  • The relative constant appearance of the colors of
    objects viewed under varying lighting conditions.

55
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Visual
    Association Cortex
  • Studies with humans
  • Achromatopsia
  • Inability to discriminate among different hues
    caused by damage to the visual association
    cortex.
  • Inferior temporal cortex
  • In primates, the highest level of the ventral
    stream of the visual association cortex located
    on the inferior portion of the temporal lobe.

56
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Visual
    Association Cortex
  • Studies with humans
  • Agnosia
  • Inability to perceive or identify a stimulus by
    means of a particular sensory modality.
  • Visual agnosia
  • Deficits in visual perception in the absence of
    blindness caused by brain damage.
  • Apperceptive visual agnosia
  • Failure to perceive objects even though visual
    acuity is relatively normal.

57
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Visual
    Association Cortex
  • Analysis of form
  • Prosopagnosia
  • Failure to recognize particular people by the
    sight of their faces.
  • Associative visual agnosia
  • Inability to identify objects that are perceived
    visually, even though the form of the perceived
    object can be drawn or matched with similar
    objects.

58
  • Analysis of Visual Information The Visual
    Association Cortex
  • Perception of movement
  • Fusiform face area
  • A region of the extrastriate cortex located at
    the base
  • of the brain involved in perception of faces
    and other objects that require expertise to
    recognize.
  • Akinetopsia
  • Inability to perceive movement, caused by damage
    to area V5 of the visual association cortex.

59
COLOR VISION
  • REQUIRES
  • At least 2 photoreceptor types
  • A way to compare their responses
  • Different wavelengths of light

60
(No Transcript)
61
(No Transcript)
62
(No Transcript)
63
  • Genes-gt Photopigments-gt Color Vision

64
(No Transcript)
65
(No Transcript)
66
(No Transcript)
67
(No Transcript)
68
(No Transcript)
69
(No Transcript)
70
  • THE MAGICIANS AND PSYCHOLGY
  • Inattentional blindness
  • if we dont attend to something we wont see it.
  • Instead of a complete, detailed scene, we
  • only see a small part which we are attending
  • to!
  • This is how magicians make things (dis)appear

71
  • Pick a card

72
Your card disappeared.
73
(No Transcript)
74
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com