visual system - dr. martin shapiro

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Vision

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PPT Slides to accompany Dr. Martin Shapiro's Visual System Lecture for Psychology 36.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Vision

Page 2: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Bionic Eye / Artificial retina

Page 3: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro
Page 4: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro
Page 5: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Retina

Page 6: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Retina

Page 7: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Rods and Cones

Page 8: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Rods vs. Cones Rods:

Scotopic vision

Night vision Achromatic Peripheral

vision ~130 million

Cones Photopic

visionDaytime vision

Color vision Foveal vision ~ 7 million

Page 9: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Spatial Summation

Page 10: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Transduction of Light

Page 11: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Action Potential

Page 12: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Rod

Page 13: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Transduction

Inside

Outside

cGMP Rhodopsin

Retinal

In the dark

Page 14: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Transduction

Inside

Outside

cGMP Rhodopsin

Retinal

In the light

Page 15: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro
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Transduction summary

In the Dark Opsin and retinal (rhodopsin) are bound

together Rod membrane is depolarized slightly at

-30 mV Na+ constantly moving in – the dark

current. Kept open by cGMP

In the Light A photon of light changes the shape of

retinal causing rhodopsin to break apart.

Causing a reduction in cGMP The rod becomes hyperpolarized.

Page 17: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Visual Pathway

Optic nerve Optic chiasm Superchiasmatic nucleus Lateral geniculate nucleus of the

thalamus Superior colliculus Visual cortex

Page 18: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Visual Pathway

Page 19: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Visual Pathway

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Visual Pathway

Page 21: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Thalamus

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Thalamus

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Striate Cortex

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Center-surround receptive fields

On-Center Cell:Response most when light strikes the center.

Off-Center CellResponse most when light strikes the outer portion of the receptive fields.

Page 29: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

On-Center Ganglion Cell

Page 30: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Receptive Fields of the Visual Cortex

Hubel and Wiesel: Nobel laureates for medicine and physiology, 1981)

Not circular receptive fields Linear receptive fields

Page 31: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Striate Cortex

Neurons are specialized to respond best to specific aspects of the stimulus: orientation, movement, size, direction.

Record from single cells in the striate cortex and present stimuli to the visual system.

Page 32: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro
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Complex Cortical Cells

Like Simple cells they are orientation specific

Large receptive fieldReact to movement in a specific direction

Page 35: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro
Page 36: Visual System - Dr. Martin Shapiro

Inferotemporal cortex

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BEV DOOLITTLE

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Our Senses

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Which is longer and which is wider?

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Visual System Summary

Transduction of light information to neural signals at the retina.

Modified at the retina with center-surround fields (intermediate cells).

Signal goes out the ganglion axons to the LGN

Back the Primary visual cortex for building of the image in: serial and parallel processing.

Context and memory play a big role in perception.