Visual System Flashcards

1
Q

What are the major functional groups of neurons in the retina?

A
  • Outermost = pigmented epithelial cells
  • Outer layer = rods and cone receptor cells
  • Intermediate layer = network of interneurons and bipolar cells
  • innermost layer = ganglion cells
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2
Q

How is the visual signal transferred to the optic N?

A

photoreceptors –> bipolar cells –> ganglion cells –> optic N.

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3
Q

Rods:

A

Rods:

  • monocolor
  • best for transient light
  • DO saturate in daylight
  • High sensitivity = night vision
  • more photopigmentation than cones
  • high amplification
  • low temporal resolution
  • low acuity
  • achromatic, one type
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4
Q

Cones:

A

Cones:

  • color
  • do NOT saturate in daylight
  • most numerous at fovea
  • low sensitivity = day vision
  • high temporal resolution
  • direct axial stimulation
  • high acuity
  • three types of cones
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5
Q

Where could you find the highest visual acuity?

A

At the fovea.

Here, bipolar cells, interneurons and ganglion cells are pushed laterally to allow the light an unobstructed path to photoreceptor layer = unobstructive pathway. Also, there are no large blood vessesl here.

Mostly cones; almost 1:1 ratio cone:ganglion cell

Foveola = avascular zone

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6
Q

What are the important components of the optic disc?

A

Where the retinal blood vessels come into the eye and the axons of the ganglion cells come together to form the optic nerve

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7
Q

What axons cross at the optic chiasm?

A

axons from nasal retina

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8
Q

How is information sent to the visual cortex?

A

From the retina, information travels through the optic nerve, nasal retinal fibers cross at the optic chiasm, continue through the optic tract to synapse at the lateral geniculate (in the thalamus. From here, optic radiations (geniculocalcrine tract) travel to the visual cortex.

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9
Q

Where does the visual information terminate?

A
  • Area 17, primary visual cortex in the occipital lobe
  • Calcrine sulcus, specifically, the lower visual fields, terminate at the upper portion, where as the lower visual fields, terminate at the lower portion.
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10
Q

What is the lateral geniculate?

A
  • Relay nucleus part of the thalamus that receives the information from the optic tract and sends it to the primary visual cortex.
  • Has 6 distinct layers, with M and P type cells
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11
Q

From where is the majority of the information sent to the visual cortex coming from?

A

70% comes from the fovea

Although fovea is only 5% of the whole retina, it has the greatest concentration of cones; cones here have an almost 1:1 or 1:2 ratio with bipolar cells. Therefore, periphery information is diluted.

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12
Q

What are the two major classes of ganglion cells found in the lateral geniculate?

A

M-type and P-type:

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13
Q

What does the magnocellular layer consist of?

A

Layers 1 and 2

M type cells = large cell bodies, dense arborization, large receptive fields, huge dendritic fields that integrate info from a lot of bipolar cells (50:1 relation)

Respond best to movement and large objects; start/stop signals.

Rods

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14
Q

What does the parvocellular layer consists of?

A

P-type cells = small cell body, 1:1 relation with cones, small receptive fields, more numerous near the fovea, wavelength selective. More layers and thicker = higher visual acuity, finer detail. Highly represented in lateral geniculate (layers 3-6)

Respond best to color and fine detail

Cones

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15
Q

Where does perception of vision begin?

A

primary visual cortex, area 17 (striate cortex, V1)

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16
Q

Not all information from the optic nerve travels to the lateral geniculate, where does a portion of the information travel to?

A
  • Pretectal area for pupillary reflexes and the superior colliculus (head and neck movements).
  • Superior colliculus, more from peripheral parts of the retina, helps to orient the head and eyes to that particular
17
Q

How does the primary visual cortex accommodate to the information it receives?

A

Visual cortex has an expanded layer IV.

18
Q

What are hypercolumns?

A

specialized columns within the cortical layers that process specific information:

  1. Orientation (spatial representation/edges)
  2. Blobs (color specificity)
  3. Occular dominance (left or right eye)
19
Q

How is the information processed?

A

Each layer of the cortex has projections to other sites in the CNS via large pyramidal cells.

As the information ascends, it gets more complex.

Two pathways:
Dorsal Stream –> posterior parietal lobe
Ventral Stream –> inferior tempora cortex

20
Q

Explain the parietal pathway:

A

A dorsal stream of non-color discriminative info from the occipital cortex is sent to the POSTERIOR PARIETAL LOBE and contains info on WHERE an object is in the visual field.

21
Q

Explain the temporal pathway:

A

A ventral stream of info from both the color and non-color discriminitative cells in the occipital cortex flows towards the INF. TEMPORAL CORTEX, organized to respond to WHAT an object is- form, shape of object in the visual field.

Lesions to the inferior temporal gyrus, can cause visual agnosia (inability to identify an object)