Vision (neuro) Flashcards
1
Q
Parts of the eye: retina
A
- temporal retina: the outside part of the eye looking towards the nasal (inside) area
- nasal retina: the inside part of the eye looking towards the temporal (outside) area
- retina is made up of neural retina, retinal ganglion cell, optic nerve and retinal pigment epithelium
2
Q
Parts of the eye: layers
A
- outer fibrous layer contains cornea and sclera
- inside layer contains vitreous humour and aqueous humour
3
Q
Parts of the eye: optics
A
- cornea: primarily responsible for focussing light rays
- iris: controls how much light enters the eye via the pupil
- ciliary body
- suspensory ligaments
- lens: provides additional, variable ‘fine’ focus
4
Q
Primary visual pathway
A
- retina
- optic nerve
- optic chiasm
- optic tract
- optic radiation
- lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN)
- primary visual cortex (area 17)
- brainstem nuclei involved in eye movements etc
5
Q
Phototransduction
A
- rods = photoreceptors for night vision
- cones = photoreceptors for day vision
6
Q
Cone photoreceptor
A
from top to bottom:
- membrane discs
- nucleus
- axon
- synaptic terminal
- resting membrane potential is -45mV to -60mV
- opposite in response to decreased light
7
Q
Transduction
A
- initiation of the light response
- amplifying biochemical cascade (supports a very rapid response to changes in illumination)
- termination of the response
8
Q
cross section through peripheral retina
A
- pigment epithelium
- photoreceptors (big gaps in sampling array, allows convergence to increase pixel size)
- interneurons
- retinal tissue (image blurs as it passes through)
- ganglion cells
9
Q
Central vision
A
- fovea centralis
- central retina
- optic nerve head
- retinal blood vessels
- the fovea is specialised for high resolution:
- good focus - overlying laters are absent
- only cone photoreceptors, primarily red and green
- which are narrow and closely packed
- the signals from the photoreceptors are kept separate throughout the primary visual pathway
10
Q
Peripheral vision
A
- majority of the retina serves only coarse vision
- the visual image is optically blurred
- the cone photoreceptors are large and widely spaced (separately by larger number of rods)
- the signals from many cones converge onto single ganglion cells
11
Q
Primary visual pathway 2
A
- image is inverted by the optics: left side of the image to right side of both retinae
- image is mapped on to LGN and cortex
- axons from nasal retina swap sides: right side of both retinae to right side of brain
- with expanded central region
- axons from a ‘retinotopic map’ in LGN and cortex with the maps for the 2 eyes in register
12
Q
Visual receptive fields
A
- photoreceptors report changes in illumination from one moment to another
- retinal ganglion cells report changes in illumination from one location to another
13
Q
Ganglion cells response to brightness
A
- half of all retinal ganglion cells respond to increases in brightness
- ‘off’ centre - central photoreceptor depolarised (red) by decreased illumination, bipolar and ganglion cells depolarised by excitatory synapses
- ‘on’ centre - central photoreceptor hyperpolarised (blue) by increased illumination, bipolar cell depolarised by inverting synapse, excites ganglion cell
14
Q
Retinal ganglion cells classes
A
- retinal ganglion cells can be divided into different classes
- two ganglion cells from the same location in the retina
- parvocellular:
• small field with strong surround
• fine resolution
• accurately follows changes in light
• needs stable image - magnocellular:
• large field with weak surround
• coarse resolution
• transient responses to change
• responds well to fast movement
15
Q
Wavelength selection of retinal ganglion cells
A
- Some retinal ganglion cells are wavelength selective
- parvocellular:
• selective inputs from “red” or
“green” photoreceptors
• by comparing these responses
they can encode wavelength
• RED vs GREEN - bistratified:
• selective inputs from “blue” or
“red+green” photoreceptors
• by comparing these responses
they can encode wavelength
• BLUE vs YELLOW