Visual function and dysfunction at higher cortical areas Flashcards

1
Q

Experiment that demonstrates the ventral stream?

A

Temporal lobe lesions interfered
with “object discrimination”
*Trained task:
–monkey had to pick familiar
object and not some new
object (to get food reward
–easy for normal monkey

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2
Q

Experiment that demonstrates the dorsal stream?

A

parietal lobe lesions interfered with
“landmark discrimination”
– Trained task:
* monkey had to pick the object
(left circle) closer to a
previously established
“landmark object (cylinder) to
get food reward
* easy for normal monkeys
– Parietal lobe lesioned monkeys
could not do this task well
* temporal lesion monkeys
performed task satisfactorily

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3
Q

What happens with some lesions of the ventral stream?

A

Visual agnosia. Can see objects but can’t identify what they are.

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4
Q

What happens with some lesions of the dorsal stream?

A

Optic Ataxia: A patient with a lesion in the right posterior parietal cortex makes mostly spatial errors (C) and fewer orientation errors (B).

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5
Q

Lesions in dorsal regions

A

Spatial errors. Putting hand in sldot incorrectly.

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6
Q

Ventral stream lesions result in what type of lesions?

A

They result in orientation lesions. In experiments, they are unable to to prient their hand towards the slot easily.

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7
Q

what is the function of the parietal cortex?

A
  • plays a central role in directing attention to
    spatial locations
    *helping to bind different attributes of an object
    together
    As a result it can it help you to
    bind the attributes of attributes of an object together because
    with this kind of spot of attention, you’re able to
    concentrate on one object at a time, and which means
    that that way you can gate what goes through the
    stream
  • gating inputs into ventral stream
  • important for reading? [link to dyslexia]
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8
Q

What does lesion in right parietal cortex result?

A

Visual neglect. Neglect 1 side of their vision. Usually left.

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9
Q

what are the different ways MT gets input?

A

Sometimes, input can come form konio pathway from LGN bypassing V1.
Can recieve input from V2, AND V3 can also get input directly from primary visual cortex.

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10
Q

Blindsight

A

In cases such as carbon monoxide poisonign where V1 is damaged, one will be able to detect motion, but will not be able to see. Mediated by inputs to MT that
bypass V1.

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11
Q

What are mirror Neurons?

A

respond to action either done by oneself or by another person. Experiment demonstrated this through the action of grasping. Could be the basis of empathy (eg, for instance feeling in pain when someone else is feeling it) Theory that people with autism lack mirror neurons as they lack empathy. (Theory of mind (being able to have perception about other people’s thought and emotions) relates to prescence of mirror neurons).

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12
Q

a

Basis of visual hallucinations?

A
  • Predictive hypotheses not
    being vetoed by afferent
    inputs, due to loss of the
    normal visual signals?
  • Perception probably works top down, that is, it originally started the helm. Who said All our perception is unconscious influences, but later on the idea has been developed further.
    The perception starts as perceptual hypothesis.
    You make hypothesis, and the more recent name for that
    is predictive coding. Incoming input just just vetoes it
    or supports it.
  • The primary visual cortex actually lights up on FMRI
    when you imagine hallucination, all this
    actually activate the primary visual cortex.
    There’s another evidence for things.
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13
Q
A
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