Download The Primary Visual C..

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Visual selective attention in dementia wikipedia , lookup

Eyeblink conditioning wikipedia , lookup

Neuroesthetics wikipedia , lookup

Subventricular zone wikipedia , lookup

Neural correlates of consciousness wikipedia , lookup

C1 and P1 (neuroscience) wikipedia , lookup

Channelrhodopsin wikipedia , lookup

Cerebral cortex wikipedia , lookup

Inferior temporal gyrus wikipedia , lookup

Feature detection (nervous system) wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Psychology 4051
The Primary Visual Cortex
The Primary Visual Cortex
• A multi-layered structure
located in the occipital lobe
(AKA, Area 17, V1, Striate
cortex).
• Receives axons from the LGN.
• Each hemisphere represents
the contralateral visual field.
The Visual Cortex
• The visual cortex is topographically organized.
• A large area of the visual cortex is mapped to the
central portion of the visual field (retina)
• Cortical magnification.
The Visual Cortex
• In all, it contains 6 layers
and the layers are
distinguished by the types
of cells they contain.
• LGN connections are sent to
layer 4C.
The Visual Cortex
• Magnocellular cells input to Layer 4C alpha.
• Parvocellular cells inputs to Layer 4C beta.
The Visual Cortex
• Layer IV projects to II, III, and IVB.
• Connections run from II and III to V and VI.
The Primary Visual Cortex
• Hubel and Weisel discovered simple, complex and
hypercomplex cells in the striate cortex.
• Most neurons in V1 are either
– Simple – respond to edges at particular locations and
orientations within the visual field
– Complex – represent a more abstract type of visual information,
at least partially independent of location within the visual field.
– Hypercomplex or end-stopped – cells that are selective for a
certain length of contour
Receptive Fields of Simple and
Complex Cells in the Visual Cortex
– Simple – receptive fields are rectangular with “on”
and “off” regions
– Complex – also rectangular, larger receptive fields,
respond best to a particular stimulus anywhere in its
receptive field
Receptive Field of Simple Cells
• Note that the central region is oblong and not circular as was
the case for the center-surround receptive field of the retinal
ganglion cells.
• Also, the surround region is now located only on the sides. In
this particular cell, the inhibitory region is located in the
center, not on the sides
Simple Cell Response
The Visual Cortex
Hubel and Weisel show that the response pattern of simple cells can
be explained by interaction of receptive fields of cells further back in
the visual system.
Complex and Hypercomplex Cells
• Complex cells respond to orientation but
location is less specific.
– Do not have center surround arrangement
• Hypercomplex cells are like complex cells, but
respond to edges that stop in the receptive
field and might be thought of as ‘corner’
detectors or ‘end of line’ detectors.
Orientation Columns
• Simple and complex cells have preferred orientation
• Electrode penetration that is exactly perpendicular to
the cortical sheet will encounter cells with the same
orientation preference (Columns).
Orientation Columns
• Moving the electrode – column with a different orientation
preference
• Preferences for neighboring columns are NOT random
– Orientation selectivity changes only slightly as you move
from column to column and there is a specific and
consistent order.
Ocular Dominance Columns
• Visual signals from the two eyes remain segregated in the LGN
and primary visual cortex.
• As the recording electrode is moved within layer 4C, there is an
abrupt shift as to which eye drives the unit. In layer 4C, the shift
from one eye to the other takes place over a distance of less than
50 microns
Ocular Dominance Columns
• Thus, layer 4c is organized into columns based on
ocular dominance.
– i.e., ocular dominance columns.
Ocular Dominance Columns
Hypercolumns
• Together, orientation columns and ocular dominance
columns form hypercolumns.
• 18-20 columns to represent all orientations for both eyes
– about 1 mm square
Hypercolumn
• Each hypercolumn encodes information about
one small sector of the retina, and neighboring
hypercolumns represent neighboring sectors of
the retina
Binocular Cells
• Although cells in layer IVC are exclusively
monocular, cells in other layers are binocular.
– Respond to stimulation in either eye.
– Binocular cells
• Although these cells are binocular, some are
driven primarily by one eye.
Disparity Selective Cells
Binocular disparity: difference in the location between the right eye's and left eye's
image. Amount of disparity depends on the depth (i.e., the difference in distance to
the two objects and the distance to the point of fixation), and hence it is a cue that
the visual system uses to infer depth.
Disparity Selective Cells
• We have cells that are disparity selective.
• They respond to specific amounts of disparity.
• Crucial for stereopsis (3-D vision).
Cytochrome Oxidase Blobs
• Found primarily in Layers 2, 3,
4. Hubel and Wiesel called
them ‘blobs’.
• Blobs are located in the
centers of ocular dominance
columns.
• They are not orientation
selective.
• Sensitive to color.