PSYC 4220 Exam 2
Having eyes close
Provides brain with the best depth perception Tend to be predators (Eagle)
photopigments (visual pigment molecules)
(In the disc, visual pigment molecule) Light sensitive chemicals in photoreceptors that respond to light and assist in converting light into neural activity - 1 large protein (opsin): protein strand - 1 small molecule (retinal): place where light-sensitive retinal is attached
Rods
- 120 million - Contain photopigment Rhodopsin - very sensitive to light - Rods work best in dim light conditions -Doesn't provide the brain with any differences in wavelengths of light -Detect different levels of light and dark, not colors
Cones
- 6 million (tightly packed in fovea) - Contain photopigment lodopsin - require higher level of light - Work best in day light
outer segment
- Contains stacks of discs the part of a photoreceptor that contains photopigment molecules. This is where transduction occurs
3 kinds of lodopsin
- each react best to different types of wavelengths 1. One corresponds with blue - shorter wavelengths 2. One corresponds with green - middle wavelength 3. One corresponds with red - longer wavelengths - We have these three because too the levels of lodopsin
How many photoreceptors do we have?
126,000,000
White's illusion
A display in which two rectangles are perceived as differing in lightness even though they both reflect the same amount of light and even though the rectangle that is perceived as lighter receives more lateral inhibition than the one perceived as darker.
grandmother cell
A hypothesized type of neuron that responds only to a very specific stimulus, such as a person's grandmother.
lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN)
A structure in the thalamus, part of the midbrain, that receives input from the retinal ganglion cells and has input and output connections to the visual cortex.
Belongingness Principle
An area's appearance is influenced by the part of the surroundings that such area appears to belong to
Hermann Grid
At intersections the amount of lateral inhibition from the brighter areas is largest --> gives off a ghost-like grey image that is caused by lateral inhibition
Perceptions that are not explained by lateral inhibitions in the retina
Binary Cross display Whites Illusion
visual modules
Brain structures specialized to processes information about a particular type of stimulus
visual pigment regeneration
Chemical rejoining opsin and retinal molecule by enzymes 4-6 minutes for iodopsin >30 minuties for rhodopsin
Do rods or cones have better visual acuity?
Cones - ability to distinguish details of a visual scene
Difference between rods and cones
Rods are responsible for vision at low light levels, while cones are active at higher light levels and are capable of color vision and high spatial acuity. (opposites)
retinal
Crucial for transduction, because it is the part of the visual pigment that is sensitive to light.
Antagonistic arrangement of receptive fields (center-surround antagonism)
Detection of light/dark contrast
pukinje shift
Enhanced sensitivity to shorter wavelengths during dark adaptation - Caused by a shift from cone vision to rod vision
The center area of receptive field
Excitatory
Where was lateral inhibition discovered originally?
Eyes of a horseshoe crab
Prosopagnosia
Form of visual agnosia following damage to the temporal cortex -> patient has difficulty in recognizing the faces of familiar people
Having eyes far
Have a broad visual field to keep an eye on the environment Tend to be prey (squirrel)
Why are we more sensitive to blue colors?
It is a wavelength that is brighter to us
ganglion cells
In the retina, the specialized neurons that connect to the bipolar cells; the bundled axons of the ganglion cells form the optic nerve.
dark-adaptation process
Increase in light sensitivity that occurs in the dark - Caused by the regeneration of photopigments in rods and cones
rod monochromats
Individuals with a very rare genetic disorder in which the retina develops with rods but without cones; used in dark adaptation experiments to establish the curve for rods
What travels across the lateral plexus?
Inhibition
The outside circle of the receptive field
Inhibitory
Average LGN neuron
Receives info from eye, if excitatory sends info to the visual cortex
mapping the receptive field
Receptive fields tend to be circles in shape and circles within circles, surrounded by a peripheral region
fuisform face area (FFA)
Responds best to faces as well as contexts that apply faces which is located in the fusiform gyrus on the underside of the brain directly below the IT cortex. They interpreted this result to mean that the FFA is specialized to respond to faces as wells as when context implies a face
receptive fields of neurons in the visual system
Retina (Ganglion cells) Lateral Geniculate Nuclei (LGN) of Thalamus Visual cortex
Do rods or cones have better sensitivity?
Rods - they have a high capacity to detect weaker light because they converge much more
Do cones or rods converge more?
Rods converge much more than cones
Retina (ganglion cells)
Run along the inner surface of the retina Leave the eye as the optic nerve Circle shape
enzyme cascade
Sequence of reactions triggered by an activated visual pigment molecule that results in transduction. Ultimately this cascade will cause a change in permeability of the Na^+ channels which changes the membrane potential
Nasal (side view)
Side of the eye closer to the nose
Temporal side
Side of the eye farther from the nose
Retina with Light
Sodium channels close -> The release of inhibitory transmitters is reduced —> Activity is less inhibited - they are excitatory The bipolar cells is less inhibited—> So the signal reaches the ganglion cells in which the firing rate increases
amacrine cells
Specialized retinal cells that contact both the bipolar cells and the ganglion cells, and are especially significant in inhibitory interactions within the retina.
horizontal cells
Specialized retinal cells that contact both the receptor cells and the bipolar cells
Maximum cone sensitivity
Takes about 3 minutes to flatten out
receptive field
The area of the retina that affects the firing of a neuron in the visual system (VS) Influences the firing rate of a neuron
The higher the visual acuity....
The better resolution
off-center ganglion cell
The outside of the cell has the excitatory effect; the inside of the cell has inhibitory effect
On-center Ganglion cells
The outside of the cell has the inhibitory effect; the inside of the cell has excitatory effect
rod-cone break
The point on the dark adaptation curve at which vision shifts from cone vision to rod vision
primary visual cortex
The region of the cerebral cortex that receives information directly from the visual system; located in the occipital lobe
dark-adapted sensitivity
The sensitivity of the eye after it has completely adapted to the dark.
light-adapted sensitivity
The sensitivity of the eye when in the light-adapted state. Usually taken as the starting point for the dark adaptation curve because it is the sensitivity of the eye just before the lights are turned off.
Retina in total darkness
The sodium channels of the photoreceptor are open. —> The membrane is depolarized. —> Cones and rods are activated to their maximum active potential —> They release inhibitory transmitters which inhibits the activity of the bipolar and ganglion cells
How can lateral inhibition explain the simultaneous contrast effect?
The square (left) surrounded by white receives more inhibition. Bc the square on the left receives more inhibition it appears darker
binocular field
The visual field produced by the overlapping of the separate visual fields from each eye when the eyes are located on the front of the face
Visual cortex
The visual processing areas of cortex in the occipital and temporal lobes. Discovered they look like rectangles or squares
Binary Cross display
Triangle B seems brighter than A because it looks like Triangle A belongs to the background, which is white so it makes it seem darker, and Triangle B belongs to the Cross, which is black so it makes it seem brighter.
Isomerization
When a photon of light hits the retinal, it changes shape, so it is sticking out from the opsin. This step that triggers the transformation of the light entering the eye into electricity in the receptors.
inhibition
a condition that reduces the likelihood of firing of a neuron - when one neuron releases an inhibitory neurotransmitter onto another neuron
retinitis pigmentosa
a degeneration of the retina that is passed from one generation to the next (although not always affecting everyone in a family). This condition first attacks the peripheral rod receptors and results in poor vision in the peripheral visual field. Eventually, in severe cases, the foveal cone receptors are also attacked, resulting in complete blindness.
single dissociation
a situation in which a patient is impaired on a particular task (task A) but relatively spared on another task (task B)
center-surround receptive field
a visual receptive field with a circular center region and a surround region forming a ring around the center; stimulation of the center produces a response opposite that generated by stimulation of the surround
superior colliculus
an area involved in controlling eye movements and other visual behaviors that receives about 10 percent of the fibers from the optic nerve.
visual pigment bleaching
change in shape and separation from the opsin causes the molecule to become lighter in color
Where does visual transduction occur?
outer segment of photoreceptors
rods and cones
contain light-sensitive chemicals called visual pigments that react to light and trigger electrical signals.
temporal lobe damage
deficit in knowledge of biological categories - what pathway (perception)
distributed coding
different perceptions are signaled by the pattern of activity that is distributed across many neurons Large # of stimuli can be coded by fewer neurons
parietal lobe damage
difficult to describe relative locations of landmarks, but can describe objects, faces, and animals - where pathway (action)
Hubel and Wiesel
discovered feature detectors
bipolar cells
eye neurons that receive information from the retinal cells and distribute information to the ganglion cells
Where are cones located?
fovea
Retinal Cortical Visual Pathway
goes through the thalamus and reaches the cortex The function is to control and coordinate eye movements
The visual field
part of the environment that is being registered on the retina Larger
peripheral retina
includes all of the retina outside of the fovea, contains both rods and cones. It is important to note that although the fovea is the place where there are only cones, there are many cones in the peripheral retina.
sensory code
information contained in the firing of neurons that belong to relatively large neural networks in the brain Info go stored in the brain by the process of learning All of these are on a continuum
lateral inhibition
inhibition that is transmitted laterally across the retina by the horizontal and amacrine cells - Causes those changes to become even more noticeable than they are in physical reality
simultaneous contrast
perception of brightness/color of one area is affected by the brightness/color of an adjacent or surrounding area
opsin
long protein strand molecule, which loops back and forth across the disc membrane seven times
macular degeneration
most common in older people, destroys the cone-rich fovea and a small area that surrounds it. This creates a "blind spot" in central vision, so when a person looks at something he or she loses sight of it
Surprising findings about LGN
much more axons come back from the cortex than go to the cortex. Our brain is constantly trying to figure out what happens next, at the neural level this is possible bc the huge feedback pathways
Optic tracks
nerve pathways traveling from the optic chiasm to the thalamus, carry info to the first brain station: the LGN
sparse coding
neural coding based on the pattern of activity in small groups of neurons
optic chiasm
point at which optic nerve fibers cross in the brain
Photoreceptors
rods and cones
layers of retina
rods, cones, bipolar cells, horizontal cells, amacrine cells, ganglion cells, optic nerve fibers
How are objects represented in the nervous system?
sensory code
Mach Band Illusion
sensory system enhances perception of borders At edges, bipolar cells get differential amount of inhibition from darker area and brighter area —> makes edge stand out perceptually
detached retina
separation of the retina from the choroid in back of the eye
Edge
sudden change in the illuminosity of a visual scene
convergence
synapsing of more than one neuron onto a single neuron
blind sight
the ability to respond to visual stimuli without consciously perceiving them
Fovea
the central focal point in the retina, around which the eye's cones cluster
specificity coding
the idea that an object could be represented by the firing of a specialized neuron that responds only to that object "grandmother cell"
lateral plexus
the lateral fiber of which strings of photoreceptors with fibers that send signals to the brain are attached
Retina
the light-sensitive inner surface of the eye, containing the receptor rods and cones plus layers of neurons that begin the processing of visual information
optic nerve
the nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain
The blind spot
the point at which the optic nerve leaves the eye, creating a "blind" spot because no receptor cells are located there
Pitfalls to specificity coding
too many different stimuli to assign specific neurons to each one
double dissociation
when two related mental processes are shown to function independently of each other