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Visual perception. Stuart red. Any difference in the pictures?. What if they are right side up?. Sereno Lab Approaches to Cognitive Neuroscience. Behavioral Testing Eye Movements Touch Responses Monkey Physiology Computational Modeling Integration of All Approaches. Visual system.
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Visual perception Stuart red
Sereno Lab Approaches to Cognitive Neuroscience • Behavioral Testing • Eye Movements • Touch Responses • Monkey Physiology • Computational Modeling • Integration of All Approaches
Parietal lesions created difficulty with localizing objects “… vision was evidently defective… it was able to pick up grains of rice scattered on the floor, but always with uncertainty as to their exact position.”
Early view of parietal lesions in humans • Sir Gordon Holmes (1918) described bilateral posterior parietal lesion patients with deficits in: • reaching and pointing to visual targets • Avoiding obstacles • Judging distance and size • No issues in object recognition • W.R. Brain (1941) • Unilateral lesions • Contralateral neglect
Inability to discriminate between objects “He appears no longer to discriminate between the different kinds of food ; e.g., he no longer picks out the currants from a dish of food…”
Kluver-bucy syndrome • Thought hallucinations preceding temporal lobe seizures were similar to mescaline induced hallucinations • Removed temporal lobes from monkeys and administered mescaline • No difference in effects of mescaline but… • When off the drug, these monkeys exhibited “psychic blindness” or “visual agnosia” • Along with a host of other symptoms…
Functional Specialization- Ventral Complex stimuli: star shape shape & texture JJ, Fig 2.3 (Tanaka, 1991)
Functional Specialization- Ventral Complex stimuli: hand orientation, not important position, not important bilateral, near fovea best Fig 6.6
History of eye tracking • Edmund Huey (1898) • Used plaster of paris cup molded to fit the cornea with whole for subject to read through
Attention • Attention filters out irrelevant information • Reflexive vs voluntary attention • Reflexive attention involves the more automatic response • Voluntary attention involves more thought
What’s required for antisaccade? • Subject must inhibit the reflexive response and transform the stimulus location into a voluntary movement to look away • Requires inhibition of saccade producing neurons in SC and FEF • Where this inhibition is coming from remains a question, could be Basal Ganglia, SEF, or DLPFC