vision Flashcards

1
Q

bipolar cells in light

A

light = photoreceptor is hyperpolarised = less glutamate onto bipolar cells = disinhibition =
- exites the ON bipolar cells that in turn excites the ON ganglion cells
- inhibits OFF bipolar cells = removes exitatory drive from ganglion cells

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2
Q

ganglion cell projections

A

20% projections to sup colliculus: Superior colliculus: responsive to sudden shifts in light

80% to lat. geniculate nucleus (thalamus) → V1

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3
Q

retina-geniculate-striate pathway

A

retina -> lat gen nucleus (thalamus) -> V1

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4
Q

Parvocellular vs Magnocellular cells

A

inhabit distinct layers of the LGN
- Parvocellular cells
- small cell bodies
- layers 3-6 of LGN
- respond to colour, fine detail, still or
slow-moving objects
- Magnocellular cells
- big cell bodies
- layers 1-2
- respond to objects in motion

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5
Q

processing in visual cortex

A
  • hierarchical (V1 → V2 → V3…)
  • but also shows concurrent processing (V1 ↔ V2 ↔ V3…)
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6
Q

V1

A
  • V1 neurons have smallest receptive fields of any region of visual cortex (and thus highest resolution)
  • responsive to colour, orientation, spatial frequency
  • processes boarders, edges, contrast
  • = contour enhancement/feature detection
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7
Q

colour perception/processing

A

V1, V2, V3 responsive to wavelength, but actual colour perception occurs at V4

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8
Q

object perception

A
  • V1-3 does the basics of simple form analysis (orientation, spatial frequency, wavelengths)
  • V4 adds perception of colour (i.e. conscious awareness of colour), and some complex contours
    • neurons respond to curvature and orientation
  • also involves on top-down processing
    • don’t need all the info to make a picture, eg illusions
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9
Q

top down processing in object recognition

A
  • e.g. optical illusions, can switch between what we ‘see’ based on the top-down perception we are imposing
  • emphasis on pattern recognition
    • automated recognition of patterns
    • like when learning music, sport
    • e.g. continuity, closure
  • Gestalt psychology (German. lit. “form” or “pattern”) but reflects the idea that the whole is different from the sum of its parts.
    • I.e. the brain creates a percept that is more than simply the sum of available sensory inputs
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10
Q

motion perception

A

V5 (aka MT)
- all neurons motion selective
- most direction selective too
- input is from V1 motion sensitive cells (for slower movement), or straight from thalamus to V5 for faster motion/survival responses

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11
Q

MTS and STS

A
  • Medial Superior Temporal (MST)
    • receives input from MT
    • responds to complex motion
    • neurons here have large receptive fields, tuned to respond to different speeds in different areas of visual field
      • relative motion of scene and observer
  • Superior temporal sulcus (STS)
    • biological motion
    • species specific
    • social perception - recognition and communication (speech, facial and biological movement)
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12
Q

THE dress

A

theory: morning birds, more see more blue light, brain subtracts this out, left with the white and gold
- also how you subconsciously perceive the direction of the light, and the quality of it
- image entering our brains are the same, but differ in how we transform the image

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13
Q

double drift illusion

A
  • see both as moving diagonally, despite one actually moving vert
  • due to alt b and w shapes
  • different responses to stimuli in V1, but same in PFC (judgement and decision making)
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14
Q

flash lag illusion

A
  • 100ms processing time from retina to brain
  • so brain predicts what it thinks is going to happen
  • allows us to respond/get to the target quickly and accurately
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15
Q

Adam Hantman’s view on the roles of the brain and the sensory systems in generating conscious perception

A
  • what we experience as consciousness is primarily the prediction, not the real-time feed
  • Our brains like to predict as much as possible, then use our senses to course-correct when the predictions go wrong
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16
Q
A