The primary visual pathway and cortex Flashcards

1
Q

describe Visual processing in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN)

A

-dLGN receptive fields strongly resemble those of RGCs
-Usrey et al sought retinal cells with RFs in the same position as per the dLGN cell already recorded (n = 205)
-and used correlation of responses to tell if they were directly connected (n=12)

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2
Q

why do dLGN receptive fields strongly resemble those of RGCs

A
  • RGC axons make big, powerful, ionotropic synapses
  • predominately on proximal dendrites
  • single RGCs make multiple connections with single LGN cells
    • which will be activated synchronously each time the RGC fires
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3
Q

What are the inputs to the LGN?

A
  • Retinal GCs ~7%
    • strength of connections
  • Brainstem inputs (e.g. ACh) ~30%
    • sleep/wake cycle, attention
  • Local inhibitory cells ~30%
  • Primary visual cortex ~30%
    • target for relay LGN cells
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4
Q

What do the inhibitory inputs do?

A

-‘on/off’ response
-activating LGN cell; strong connection
-Reversal potentials indicates chloride channels are open ⇒ GABA-A: fast inhibitory inputs ⇒ strong inhibitation

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5
Q

What do the cortical inputs do?

A

see loop

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6
Q

Receptive fields of the primary visual cortex

A

-layer 4 simple cell
-single eye preference
-short summation without end-stopping
-moderate velocity sensitivity

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7
Q

where do P and M cells terminate in the visual cortex of a primate

A

m: 4C-alpha
p: 4C-beta

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8
Q

describe Cortical receptive fields

A

-discovered by Hubel & Wiesel

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9
Q

what are V1 cells?

A

-unresponsive to flashing spots
-prefer elongate stimuli
-orientation tuned
-direction tuned
-velocity tuned
-length tuned
-have varying degrees of eye preference

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10
Q

what are simple cells?

A

-have separate ‘on’ and ‘off’ zones, found in LGN-receptive layers

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11
Q

what are complex cells?

A

-respond to ‘on’ and ‘off’ throughout their fields, found on other layers

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12
Q

what are hypercomplex cells?

A

-have complex fields with inhibitory and zones, found esp in layer 2-3

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13
Q

how are simple cells made?

A

LGN cells (nb cat)

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14
Q

how are complex cells made?

A

simple cells +

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15
Q

how are hypercomplex cells made?

A

complex cells +

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16
Q

Layer 4 simple cells?

A

Layer 4 simple cells DO inherit their zones from the LGN

17
Q

summarise the connective data

A

LGN -> VC pairs

18
Q

where are simple cells more common?

A

in LGN-recipient layer but both types can be found in all layers

19
Q

what cells can be ‘end-stopped’

A

-simple and complex and many in LGN-recipient layers

20
Q

what % of cortical cells are inhibitory? and what does that mean?

A

25%
-inhibition has shown to create/enhance a wide range of visual selective

21
Q

what do cortical cells respond best to?

A

discontinuities in the stimulus = orientation more different

22
Q

what do Cortical inputs to dLGN create?

A

‘cortex-like’ properties

23
Q

what is one function of corticofugal feedback?

A

generates length tuning in the dLGN

24
Q

what is a more global function of corticofugal feedback?

A

generate sensitivity to discontinuities in the image

25
Q

describe columnar organisation

A

cortical surface; 1-6 layers
R and L eye axons

26
Q

describe the Sophisticated hypercolumn

A

-‘blobs’ stain for cytochrome oxidase
-they are strung along the centres of the OD columns - cells tend to be monocular
-they form the pinwheels in the orientation columnar system - cells tend to be broadly oriented
-they receive koniocellular LGN input - these sites have a role in colour vision

27
Q

describe stereopsis

A

the computation of depth information from views acquired simultaneously from different points in space
-binocular visual fields
-‘near’ and ‘far’ tuned cell