Biological Psychology Chapter 5: Vision
simple cell
a receptive field with fixed excitatory and inhibitory zone, the less the cell responds
negative color afterimage
a replacement of red you had been staring at with green, yellow and blue, black and white
motion blindness
ability to see objects but impairment at seeing whether they are moving or which direction and how fast
in the fovea, each ___ has its own line to the brain in midget ganglion cells
cone
selective attention
focusing conscious awareness on a particular stimulus
feature detectors
neurons whose responses indicate the presence of a particular feature
fixations
pauses during which eyes are almost stationary and visual information is taken in
binocular
stimulation from both eyes
optic chiasm
the optic nerves from the two eyes meet; half of the axons from each eye cross to the opposite side of the brain
visual field
the part of the world you see
blind spot
the point where light leaves the eye where there are no receptors
sensation
the process of detecting stimuli in the environment, or within the body
retina
the rear surface of the eye
lateral inhibition
the reduction of activity in one neuron by activity in neighboring neurons; heightens contrast
transduction
the translation of information from the environment into neural signals
dorsal stream
through the parietal cortex, "where" or "how" pathway; visually guided movements
top-down processing
to screen out information irrelevant to the current task
stimulus (light) goes through ______ to fire action potentials to the brain
transduction
parvocellular neurons
with small cell bodies and small receptive fields; are mostly in or near the fovea
light converts ___-____-____ to all-trans-retinal, thus releasing energy that activates second messengers within the cell
11-cis-retinal
humans perceive wavelengths between _____ and ______
400nm; 750nm
astigmatism
a blurring of vision for lines in one direction caused by an asymmetric curvature of the eyes
fovea
a tiny area specialized for acute, detailed vision; blood vessels and ganglion cell axons are almost absent near the fovea
continuous flash suppression
a viewer is conscious of the flashing stimuli and not the steady picture
cones
abundant in and near the fovea; are less active in dim light, more useful in bright light, and essential for color vision
rods
abundant in the periphery of the human retina, respond to faint light but are not useful in daylight because bright light bleaches them
primary visual cortex
also known as area V1 and striate cortex; information from the lateral geniculate nucleus of the thalamus goes to this area in the occipital lobe
receptive field
an area in visual space that excites or inhibits it
pupil
an opening in the center of the iris where light enters
the responses of cells in V4 correspond to the ____ or _____ color of an object
apparent; perceived
some can identify an object's color, direction of movement, and approximate shape using ______ ______
area V1
the activity in ____ ____ corresponds to what you think you see, not what the object really is
area V1
MT (middle temporal cortex); MST (medial superior temporal cortex)
area V5 (MT); both for motion perception; receive input mostly from magnocellular path, which detects overall patterns, including movement over large areas of the visual field; color insensitive
light ----> retina ----> _____ & _____ cells ----> _____ & _____ cells
bipolar and horizontal; amacrine and ganglion
damage to the connections between primary visual cortex and temporal cortex
cause impairment of identifying shapes orientation of an object
photopigments
chemicals that release energy when struck by light
wavelength is to _____; amplitude is to ______
color; brightness
color vision deficiency
colorblindness; results when people with certain gees fail to develop one type of cone; develop an abnormal type of cone
the retinex theory
cortex compares information from various parts of the retina to determine the brightness and color for each area
if eyes remain shut longer, ______ responses start to become sluggish and lose their well-defined receptive fields. eventually, ____ cortex starts responding to _____ and ____ stimuli instead
cortical; visual; auditory; touch
sensitive period
experiences have a particularly strong and enduring influence
optic nerve
formed when ganglion cell axons join; light exits through the back of the eye
amacrine cells
get information from bipolar cells to other bipolar, amacrine, and ganglion cells
end-stopped or hypercomplex cells
has a strong inhibitory area at one end of its bar-shaped receptive field
prosopagnosia
impaired ability to recognize faces; stemmed from either brain damage or developed few connections
ganglion cells
information gets sent to this part after bipolar cells to the brain
magnocellular neurons
larger cell bodies and receptive fields; distributed evenly throughout the retina
strabismus (strabismic amblyopia)
lazy eye; a condition in which the eyes do not point in the same direction
bipolar cells
located closer to the center of the eye; messages are received here first
complex cells
located in areas V1 and V2, do not respond to the exact location of the stimulus; responds to a pattern of light in a particular orientation anywhere within its large receptive field
horizontal cells
make inhibitory contact onto bipolar cells, which in turn make synapses onto amacrine cells and ganglion cells
lateral geniculate nucleus
part of the thalamus; ganglion cell axons go to this area then sends axons to other parts of the thalamus and the visual cortex
primate ganglion cells fall into three categories:
parvocellular, magnocellular, and koniocellular
opponent-process theory
perceive color in terms of opposites
The Trichromatic (Young-Helmholtz) Theory
perceive color through the relative rates of response by three kinds of cones, each one maximally sensitive to a different set of wavelengths
towards the ____ of the retina, more and more receptors converge onto bipolar and ganglion cells
periphery
secondary visual cortex (area V2)
processes information further and transmits it to additional areas from primary visual cortex (area V1)
opsins
proteins that modify the photopigments' sensitivity to different wavelengths of light
the _____ _____ of a rod or cone is simply the point in space from which light strikes the cell
receptive field
the ______ send messages to excite the closest ______ ______ and also send messages to slightly inhibit them and the neighbors to their sides
receptors; bipolar cells
inferior temporal cortex
respond to meaningful objects
fusiform gyrus
responds more strongly to faces than anything else
stereoscopic depth perception requires the brain to detect ____ ____
retinal disparity
vision is poorer at night because you use _______
rods
the vertebrate retina contains two types of receptors:
rods and cones
____ outnumber ____ by about 20 to 1 but _____ provide 90% of brain's input
rods; cones; cones
damage to the dorsal stream
see objects but don't integrate their vision well with their arm and leg movements; able to read and recognize objects but cannot reach or grasp the object
blue/purple have _____ wavelengths, while red/yellow have _____ wavelengths
short; long
koniocellular neurons
small cell bodies; they occur throughout the retina
ventral stream
specialized for identifying and recognizing objects; "what" pathway
waterfall illusion
suggests that you have fatigued the neurons that detect downward motion, leaving unopposed the detectors for the opposite motion
color constancy
the ability to recognize colors despite changes in lighting
blindsight
the ability to respond in limited ways to visual information without perceiving it consciously
bottom-up processing
the brain organizes simple sensory input into meaningful perception
saccades
the decrease in activity of area MT and parts of the parietal cortex during voluntary eye movements
retinal disparity
the discrepancy between what the left and right eyes see
inattention blindness
the failure to see an object that is looked directly, even highly visible
midget ganglion cells
the ganglion cells in the fovea of humans and other primates
perception
the interpretation of sensory information received by the brain
visual agnosia
visual lack of knowledge; damage in temporal cortex; able to point to visual objects and slowly describe them but fail to recognize what they are
law of specific nerve energies
whatever excites a particular nerve establishes a special kind of energy unique to that nerve; impulses in certain neurons indicate light, others indicate sound, touch, or other sensations