Chapter 7: vision Flashcards

1
Q

retina

A

turns light into neural signals through transduction

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2
Q

cornea

A

transparent outer layer; bends light rays through refraction and is primarily responsible for forming the image on the retina

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3
Q

lens

A

changes shape to fine-tune the image on the retina

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4
Q

accommodation

A

process where ciliary muscles adjust the lens to bring nearby objects into focus

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5
Q

myopia

A

(nearsightedness) difficulty seeing distant objects; eye grows to long

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6
Q

photoreceptors

A

sensory neurons that detect light (rods and cones)

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7
Q

rods

A

most active at low light and respond to visible light of almost any wavelength

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8
Q

cones

A

different varieties that respond differently to light of varying wavelengths: see color

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9
Q

bipolar cells

A

interneuron in the retina that receives information from rods and cones and passes information to retinal ganglion cells

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10
Q

ganglion cells

A

cells whose axons form the optic nerve (only ones that use action potentials)

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11
Q

optic nerve

A

carries information to the brain

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12
Q

horizontal cells

A

make contacts among the photoreceptors and bipolar cells

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13
Q

amacrine cells

A

contact both the bipolar cells and the ganglion cells

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14
Q

scotopic system

A

a system in the retina that operates at low light and involves rods but is insensitive to color; sides of the retina(periphery)

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15
Q

convergence

A

phenomenon of neural connections in which many cells send signals to a single cell

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16
Q

photopic system

A

high levels of light, shows sensitivity to color and involves the cones; found mostly in the fovea

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17
Q

rhodopsin

A

the photopigment in rods that responds to light and cause signaling chain that leads to hyperpolarization(photons=quanta of light)

18
Q

pupil

A

deals with the large range of intensities by adjusting the size (and opening in the iris)

19
Q

range fractionation

A

each sensory receptor cell specializes in just one part of the overall range of intensities

20
Q

photoreceptor adaptation

A

each photoreceptor constantly adjusts its sensitivity to match the average level of ambient light

21
Q

fovea

A

the center region of the retina has a high density of smaller, tightly-packed cones with high acuity

22
Q

visual acuity

A

a measure of how much detail we see and is
sharpest in the center of the visual field.

23
Q

optic disc

A

where blood vessels and ganglion cell axons leave the eye

24
Q

blind spot

A

region on the retina that is sightless due to lack of photoreceptors in the optic disc

25
Q

optic cortex

A

receives action potentials from ganglion cells

26
Q

visual field

A

the area that is visible without movement of the eye or head

27
Q

topographic projection

A

This organization is preserved as the information travels through the
brain

28
Q

on-center bipolar cells

A

turning on light in the center of its receptive field excites the cells because it receives less glutamate, which inhibits this type of bipolar cell

29
Q

off-center bipolar cells

A

turning off light in the center of the field excites the cells because they receive more glutamate and are depolarized

30
Q

on-center ganglion cells

A

on-center bipolar cells excite when light is turned on

31
Q

off-center ganglion cells

A

Off-center bipolar cells excite when light is turned off

32
Q

lateral inhibition

A

sensory receptor cells inhibit information from neighboring receptor cells, producing a contrast effect at the edges of regions

33
Q

simple cortical cells

A

(bar detectors/ edge detectors) respond to an edge or bar of a particular width, orientation, and location in the visual field

34
Q

complex cortical cells

A

respond best to a bar of a particular width
and orientation that is in motion anywhere in the visual field.

35
Q

spatial frequency model

A

the visual system analyzes the number of light-dark (or color) cycles in any stimulus

36
Q

wavelength

A

color is perceived by the visual system as we detect differences in the photons within a certain range.

37
Q

trichromatic hypothesis

A

Three different types of cones
* Each responds to a specific, different part of the spectrum
* Each has a separate pathway to the brain
* Color recognized based on which receptors are activated

38
Q

opponent-process hypothesis

A

Four unique hues
* Three opposed pairs of colors
* Three physiological processes with opposed positive and
negative value are the basis of color vision

39
Q

spectrally opponent cells

A

(color-opponent): have opposite firing responses to different regions of the spectrum

39
Q

ventral stream

A

identifying objects (what)
o Damage causes problems in perceiving faces and
objects.

40
Q

dorsal stream

A

assessing the location of objects (where),
and guiding our movement toward them

41
Q

amblyopia

A

misalignment of the eyes; reduced visual acuity not caused by optical or retinal damage
* visual cortex suppresses information from one eye
*eye muscles can be surgically adjusted to achieve better alignment; and use weak eye regularly