Systems Lecture 4 Flashcards

1
Q

how many photoreceptors in retina

A

100 million

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2
Q

how many photoreceptors in afferent axons

A

1 million - convergence from retina to axon

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3
Q

binocular vision is what

A

two images- allows us to have depth perception

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4
Q

general flow of visual information

exceptions?

A

retina –> lateral geniculate nucleus –> area 17/ V1/ striate cortex –> 2 dozen other cortical areas

although some connections bypass thalamus (LGN) - although these ones do not help us see things

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5
Q

how light info goes through cell types in retina

A

photoreceptors (outside of retina; closest to brain) –(horizontal cells) –> bipolar – (amacrine) –> ganglion

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6
Q

photoreceptors to bipolar cells is what type of communication

A

chemical

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7
Q

ganglion cells communicate how

A

electrically - action potentials

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8
Q

cell type to cell type; antagonistic vs same activation

A

photoreceptor –> bipolar (antagnositic)

bipolar –> ganglion (same)

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9
Q

what is the purpose of lateral cell communication - horizontal cell and amacrine cells

A

they are “gate keepers” cam influence the degree of inhibitory or excitatory synapses by modulating release of neurotransmitters in the synaptic cleft

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10
Q

source of output from retina?

other communication in eye?

A

ganglion cells only - electrical communication through action potentials
- others hyperpolarize of depolarize depending on light - chemical communication - neurotransmitter release proportional to hyperpolarization and depolarization

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11
Q

lining in back of eye ____ is important for what

A

melanin - deflecting light - limits light scattering in back of retina

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12
Q

rods:

A

more sensitive for light - responsible for night vision (scoptic vision) - no colour - short- more rods than cones - lots of convergence in order to detect any light

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13
Q

cones:

A

longer than rods; less of them than rods; 3 photopigments (short, medium long responsive to different wavelengths); daytime vision (photopic vision)
- high acuity in central field bc there are many cones

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14
Q

fovea:

A

best acuity if light hits here; full of cones; no rods; pit in fovea to help reduce light defraction to photoreceptors/ cones and/or to minimize interference of light passing through other cells

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15
Q

mesopic
scoptic
photic
light conditions and corresponding photoreceptors

A

mesopic- both rods and cones; low lght

scoptic - night vision - rods

photic - light conditions- cones

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16
Q

high level of rods where on retina

A

periphery - why in dark you see more in your peripheral vision

17
Q

spot with no photoreceptors in eye

A

blind spot- where optic nerve exits eye

18
Q

rods or cones more convergence

A

rods - need to be very light sensitive - only need small amount of light to activate ganglionic cells

19
Q

ON center bipolar cell receptor? how does this respond to the presence of light

A

metabotropic -
light–> cone, hyperpolarizes, no glutamate - they are no open and are excited
- called ON center because light turns them on - rapid firing

20
Q

OFF center bipolar cell receptor? response to light?

A

ionotropic glutamate receptors (glutamate gated)- light –> photoreceptors –> hyperpolarize –> no glutamate–> cant open receptor –> inhibited
OFF bc light turns them off - reduced firing

21
Q

in response to light, photoreceptors

A

light- hyperpolarize - no glutamate released

dark - depolarize - glutamate released

22
Q

why is the receptive field surround antagonistic to receptive field center?

A

surround - bilateral connection by horizontal cells to bipolar cells - photoreceptor –> horizontal (same activation) horizontal –> bipolar (same activation)

23
Q

inhibition of bipolar cell activation reduces firing, no firing only occurs…

A

in response to cancellation from surround when center is on - has to be equally covered

24
Q

when dark completely coves the receptive field - surround and center - is the response cancelled?

A

no bc surround has more real-estate

25
Q

P type ganglionic cells

A

smaller than M type
have a more prolonged response to light - sustained action potential firing as long as stimulus is present
90% prevalent; slower I optic nerve than M type

26
Q

M type ganglioniccells

A

larger than P type cells 5% prevalent

fast transient response to light - sensitive to low light; faster in optic nerve than P type

27
Q

where are M and P cells locate in visual system

function?

A

within on and off center surround environments; ganglion cells; communicate to bipolar cells - net output of convergence dictates whether cells become excited or inhibited

28
Q

retinofugal projection

A

flees eye
afferent projection - goes towards CNS

three components:

1) optic nerve
2) optic chiasm
3) optic tract

29
Q

decussation means

A

crossing over of info

30
Q

types of visual fields

A

temporal and nasal hemifields - nasal is the part closest to nose, temporal is part closest to outside; for both right and left eye

31
Q

if cut optic tract what would happen

A

lose half of vision on opposite side
left tract - right half vision
right tract - left half vision

32
Q

if cut optic nerve what would happen

A

lose 1/4 vision, only vision that isn’t covered by another part of the eyes

33
Q

cut optic chiasm what would happen

A

lose outside vision - sill have middle vision- no vision can cross over to be processed by correct part of brain

34
Q

visual pathway generally

A

retina–> LGN –> optic radiation –> primary visual cortex (area 17)

35
Q

what happens if you cut and damafe one side of thalaus and cover one part of eye

A

link to fear and stress gone - cat could see snake with one working eye and be scared. Cover that one up and use other working eye to see snake - now not scared

36
Q

superior colliculus function

A

important for eye movement

-

37
Q

____ % of info that comes from eye goes to superior colliculus through _____

A

10% via retinal tectum projection

38
Q

Lateral Geniculate Nucleus

A

located in thalamus

  • 6 curved layers (geniculatus) going from bottom up
  • first two layers are magnocellular - stain heavily with nissel staining- parvo cells are III to VI (alternating and starting at layer III with ipsilateral)- input comes from retinal ganglion cells - from contralateral visual field (not contralateral eye); not true that left visual field goes to left eye and right visual field goes to right eye –> crossing over
  • output to striate cortex