Vision

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Vision “El ojo que ves no es ojo porque tu lo veas, es ojo porque te ve” Antonio Machado “The eye you see is not an eye due to you seeing it, It’s an eye because it sees you”

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Vision. “El ojo que ves no es ojo porque tu lo veas, es ojo porque te ve ” Antonio Machado “The eye you see is not an eye due to you seeing it, It’s an eye because it sees you”. Vision: Outline. Light Eye Visual Path Visual Cortex. UV rays. Wave frequency. Wave - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Vision

Page 1: Vision

Vision

“El ojo que ves no es

ojo porque tu lo veas,

es ojo porque te ve”

Antonio Machado

“The eye you see

is not an eye due to you seeing it,

It’s an eye because it sees you”

Page 2: Vision

Vision: Outline

• Light

• Eye

• Visual Path

• Visual Cortex

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Perceptual Dimensions of Light

Wave amplitude

Purity of the wave

Wave frequency

UV rays

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4

The Eye

• Cornea

• Pupil/Iris

• Lens

• Retina– Cones

– Rods

– Fovea

– Optic disc (blindspot)

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transparent medium air(cornea, aqueous humor, pupil,lens, vitreous humor)

lens lensiris diaphragmretina film a focal point a focal point

Similarity btw eye & camera known

since 1600’s

Eye anatomy: Functions

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Near-sightedness (Myopia ):

image falls too short of retina (eyeball too long)

newborns

Far-sightedness:

focal point of light falls beyond retina

(Eyeball is too short)

Lasik Changes the shape of the cornea(Laser-Assisted In Situ Keratomileusis)

Eye Anatomy: Abnormalities

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Near-Sightedness

nearby things are on focus

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Cataracts

• Reduced illumination, acuity, and color saturation• Deposits in the lens

• Common in older adults

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Eye Anatomy: Retina

• fovea: center of the retina, high concentration of cones• optic disk (blindspot) & direct view of arteries (clinical importance)• photorreceptors: cones (color vision) and rods

Red eye in photos due to dilated pupils

Retina of diabetic patient

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Concentration ofCones & Rods

in Retina

Visual Acuity

Eye Anatomy: Retina

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Eye Anatomy: Retina

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One Cones --> one ganglion cell high acuity (fovea) Many Rods --> ganglion cells. High sensitivity (periphery)

(e.g, night vision)

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Lateral visual field

Medial Retina

The eye is a device 'designed' to see, but the ‘blindspot’ reveals it is not perfect

Eye Anatomy: Optic disc (blindspot)

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Receptive field (RF)• is that portion of the visual field (outside world) in which

the presentation of visual stimuli will produce an alteration in the firing rate of a particular neuron

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Tri-chromatic theory – Blue, red, & green “color”

receptors

Peak sensitivities of the three conesCOLOR VISION

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Test for Deuteranopia: Name number: (‘5’ or ‘2’)If you see a 2: Red/Green Color blindness (male)

Most people who are color blind can see colors

No ‘green’ cones

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Vision: Outline

• Light

• Eye

• Visual Path & its deficits

• Visual cortex

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Visual Paths

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Scotoma: A small blindspot in the visual field caused by a small lesion, usually in the occipital lobe

Hemianopia – objects are bisected with ½ obscured experiencing the obscured part as “blank” or “void”

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Vision: Outline

• Light

• Eye

• Visual Path & its deficits

• Visual cortex• V1: Orientation sensitive

– Ventral Pathway – Dorsal Pathway

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Visual Cortex

V1: primaryvisual cortex

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Primary visual cortex (V1)

• V1 cells respond to lines – of particular orientations – of particular widths.

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Vision: Outline

• Light

• Eye

• Visual Path & its deficits

• Visual cortex• Orientation sensitive

– Ventral Pathway• Area MT (motion), Object Recognition, Area V4 (color)• synesthesia

– Dorsal Pathway • Spatial Attention• Hemispatial Neglect

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• Complex & with multiple connections

• Over-simplified version: dorsal & ventral paths

Cortical Connections of Visual areas

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Ventral & Dorsal Paths

¼ of the brain is involved in visual processing, more than for all other senses

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Ventral & Dorsal Paths

& how

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Ventral & Dorsal Paths

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Ventral Path: Object recognition

Lesion of ventral pathwayAgnosia

fMRI: Object recognition

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Cerebral Achromatopsia: bilateral damage to V4

Color is more important of ‘what’ than for ‘where’ Synesthesia

Ventral Pathway (V4): Color perception

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Ventral Path: Objects vs. Faces

Are faces very difficult objects or special ones (i.e., specific process)

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Neuroimaging of face, bird and car experts

“Face Experts”

FusiformGyrus

FusiformGyrus

CarExperts

BirdExperts

FusiformGyrus

Gauthier et al., 2000

Cars-Objects Birds-Objects

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ControlGroup

AutismGroup

Hypoactivation of fusiform face area Schultz, et al. 2000

Faces

FusiformGyrus

FusiformGyrus

Children with autism as face “novices”

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Area MT: motion perception

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In sum, different parts of the visual cortex are specialized in the processing of specific features

• For example,• movement, • color.• Objects• Faces• Location

Binding problem: If the brain processes features separately, how does it bind those features into a single conscious representation:

Answer: Attention