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Visual Sensation & Perception. How do we see?. Structure of the eye. The Retina. Visual Receptors. Rods Slowly adapting Black & White vision 120 million; None in fovea Cones Rapidly adapting Color vision 5 million; 50,000 in fovea. Retinal Ganglion cells.
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Visual Sensation & Perception How do we see?
Visual Receptors • Rods • Slowly adapting • Black & White vision • 120 million; None in fovea • Cones • Rapidly adapting • Color vision • 5 million; 50,000 in fovea
Retinal Ganglion cells • Gather information from many rods and cones across an area of the retina. • How many rods and cones depends on the size of the ganglion cell’s receptive field • The closer to the fovea, the smaller the receptive field. • Project out of the eye through the optic nerve, creating a blind spot. • 1 million retinal ganglion cells (receiving signals from 125 million receptors).
Receptive fields of retinal ganglion cells • Center-surround • Most are excitatory center, inhibitory surround. • Some are the opposite
Out of the retina • Signals from the two eyes cross over to the opposite brain hemisphere at the optic chiasm. • Not all signals from an eye go to contra-lateral hemisphere. • Which hemisphere the signal goes to is based on which visual hemifield the ganglion cell receives information from.
Into the brain • Ganglion cells synapse in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) of the thalamus. • For comparison, the auditory nerve synapses in the medial geniculate nucleus. • The LGN divides the signals into layers depending on which eye they come from, and whether they come from the fovea or not. • 1, 4, & 6 from the contralateral eye; 2, 3, and 5 from the ipsilateral eye. • 1 and 2 from the fovea. • 400,000 cells leave the LGN
V1 • From the LGN, the signals are sent to area V1 in the very back of the occipital lobe. • Signals are organized into a retinotopic map based on where on the retina they come from, and which eye they come from.
Feature detectors in V1 • The retinotopic map is not simply a light/dark detector. Signals are beginning to be combined into simple feature detectors that can detect lines at various orientations. • All of the feature detectors for a particular area of the retina are anatomically organized into a column. • A hypercolumn is two columns from corresponding parts of both retinas.
Beyond V1 • From V1, signals go to area V2 where the combine into more complex features (corners and simple shapes). • After V2, the signal splits into two streams of information. • The what stream passes through V3 (which does color detection) into the temporal lobe. • The where stream passes through V4 (which aids with motion detection) into the parietal lobe.