Central Visual Processing Flashcards

1
Q

Why is layer IV (neocortex) of the primary visual cortex especially thick?

A

The large amount of visual input coming from the lateral geniculate nucleus

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2
Q

How is layer IV organized in the primary visual cortex?

A

Ocular dominance columns

LGN axons relay information specifically from either the left or right eye to the cortical neurons in one column

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3
Q

What is the difference between monocular and binocular neurons?

A

Monocular neurons receive input from only one eye - e.g. cells in ocular dominance columns

Binocular neurons receive input from both eyes - e.g. some neurons in higher layers of striate cortex receiving converging input from layer IV cells

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4
Q

What are blobs?

A

Defined histologically by a high concentration of cytochrome oxidase

Neurons in the blob of primary visual cortex have wavelength sensitive responses to visual stimuli - i.e. important in color discrimination

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5
Q

What are Magnocellular LGN neurons?

A

Have circular center-surround receptive fields

Monocular

Respond transiently, and are wavelength insensitive

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6
Q

What are Simple cells?

A

Have elongated receptive fields thought to result from converging input from several LGN cells

Orientation selective - respond best to stimuli presented in a specific orientation aligned with their β€œon” zone

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7
Q

How are orientation selective cells arranged in the cortex?

A

Columns

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8
Q

What are directionally selective cells?

A

In addition to being orientation selective, many of these cells have the additional response property of direction selectivity

Allows for the analysis of motion

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9
Q

What are parvocellular, interblob (P-IB) channel neurons?

A

Located in the PVC, in between cytochrome oxidase blobs - also called complex cells

Highly orientation selective

Fire in response to stimuli anywhere in their receptive field

Small, elongated receptive fields

Analyze object shape/form

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10
Q

What are blob channel neurons?

A

Function to analyze object color

Located within the blob

Wavelength sensitive

Circular receptive fields

Not orientation or direction selective

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11
Q

What is retinotopic organization?

A

Each point in the visual field is represented by neuronal activity within a specific location of striate cortex

Some degree of retinotopic organization is maintained in extrastriate cortical areas

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12
Q

What is a hypercolumn?

A

Small cube of cortex that contains:

1) a complete set of orientation columns (all possible orientations represented)
2) Input from both eyes (complete set of ocular dominance columns)
3) All three information processing channels (M, P-IB, and Blob)

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13
Q

How are neurons within the medial temporal (MT) area specialized?

A

Specialized for analysis of motion

Directionally selective

Large receptive fields

Directional tuning - respond to movement in a narrow range of directions

Allows this are to analyze movement better than V1

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14
Q

What types of motion are neurons in the medial superior temporal (MST) area specialized for?

A

Complex motions such as:

Linear

Radial

Circular

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15
Q

What is the result of lesions in the dorsal stream?

A

Impaired perception of motion

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16
Q

What areas are a part of the dorsal stream?

A

MT - medial temporal

MST - medial superior temporal

17
Q

What areas are a part of the ventral stream?

A

V4

IT - inferior temporal

18
Q

How are neurons in V4 specialized?

A

Large receptive fields

Orientation and color selective

19
Q

What can occur from lesions in V4?

A

Achromatopisa

Complete loss of color vision

20
Q

How are neurons in the IT area specialized?

A

Respond to colors and highly specific shapes

thought to have a particularly important role in face recognition (fusiform gyrus is located here)

21
Q

What is the parallel activation theory?

A

Visual information is prcoessed simultaneously, in multpile, parallel areas of the visual system

Perception results from the binding of information from all of these areas

22
Q

What occurs as a result of strabismus in children?

A

The visual system suppresses input from one eye causing permanent low acuity and poor depth perception in the suppressed eye if untreated

Indicates a critical period of neuron development in which vision must be intact

Can be corrected with patching of the strong eye

23
Q

What is retinal disparity?

A

Mechanism for near-field depth perception

Objects produce slightly different images on each retina

Neurons which are sensitive to retinal disparity receive binocular input

24
Q

What depth cues are used for far-field depth perception?

A

Size

Interposition

Linear perspective

Ligh and shadow

Motion parallax