Sensation and Perception Problem Set Facts Flashcards
What range of photon wavelengths is the human eye sensitive to?
400-700 nm
Is the crystalline lens thickest or thinnest when you are looking at a faraway object?
thinnest
What is astigmatism?
Defect caused by unequal curving of the cornea or lens in different directions,
What is emmetropia?
A condition where the strength of the lens is properly matched to the length of the eye
What is hyperopia?
- An image of a distant object becomes focused behind the retina, making objects up close appear out of focus. (farsighted)
- The condition where the lens is too weak for the length of the eye
What is accomdation?
The process in which the eye adjusts the thickness of the lens, in order to focus on
objects at various distances
How do complex vs simple cells respond to certain orientations?
A simple cell responds to oriented lines at a particular location in its receptive field,
Complex cell responds to oriented lines at any location in its receptive field.
At what point in the visual pathway do cells first exhibit spiking responses?
Spiking responses first appear in the collector cells (i.e., horizontal, bipolar, and
amacrine cells).
At what point in the visual pathway do cells first exhibit centre surround receptive fields?
Centre-surround receptive fields first occur in the ganglion cells
At what point in the visual pathway do cells first exhibit binocular responses and orientation tuning?
Orientation tuning and binocular responses first appear in V1 cells.
Describe how accommodation adjusts the crystalline lens in order to focus on objects
at different distances.
The lens is attached to a ring of ciliary muscles by fibers called the zonules of Zinn.
1) In the resting state, the ciliary muscles are relaxed and form a large ring. They stretch
the lens so that it is relatively flat. This is the state of the eye when focusing on faraway
objects.
2) The ciliary muscles can contract inwards to form a smaller ring. This allows the lens to
shrink into a thicker, more spherical shape. This is the state of the eye when focusing on
nearby objects.
Explain why contrast sensitivity is lower at high spatial frequencies
In the fovea, cones are spaced about 1/120 degree apart. This means that the cones
cannot accurately represent a sine wave grating with a spatial frequency higher than
around 60 cycles/degree
How do the spatial frequencies in an image change as the image moves farther away
from you?
- As sine waves move away from you, the spatial frequency of sine wave increases.
- The contrast sensitivity function shows that above 2 to 4 cycles/degree,
human visual sensitivity decreases. - So, as an image moves farther away, the spatial frequencies that make it up move upwards into the spatial frequency region where we are less sensitive, and the object becomes harder to see
Suppose that there are three channels of simple cells in V1, with preferred spatial
frequencies of 4, 5, and 6 cycles/degree, at a vertical orientation. When you look at a
vertical sine wave of spatial frequency 5 cycles/degree, what will the relative activation of each channel normally be? (You can either describe the activations verbally, or make up an illustrative number for each channel.)
4 cycle/degree channel activation = 5
5 cycle/degree channel activation = 10
6 cycle/degree channel activation = 5
Suppose you adapt to a vertical sine wave of spatial frequency 4 cycles/degree for
several minutes. When you look back at the original vertical sine wave of 5
cycles/degree, what will the relative activation the channels be then? How will this affect the appearance of the original sine wave, if at all?
4 cycle/degree channel activation = 2
5 cycle/degree channel activation = 10
6 cycle/degree channel activation = 5
This is the pattern of activation that would be produced by a sine wave with a
spatial frequency higher than 5 cycles/degree, so the sine wave will appear to
have a higher spatial frequency than 5 cycles/degree.