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Vision • How does our body construct our conscious visual experience? • How de we transform particles of light energy to another? • We do this by receiving light energy and transforming it into neural messages that our brains process into what we consciously see. The Stimulus Input- Light Energy • What strikes are eyes IS NOT color, but rather electromagnetic energy that we perceive as color. • The next slide shows the range from imperceptibility short waves of gamma rays to the narrow band we see as visible light, to the long waves of radio transmission and AC circuits. Both Photos: Thomas Eisner The Stimulus Input: Light Energy Visible Spectrum 3 Wavelength (Hue) Hue (color) is the dimension of color determined by the wavelength of the light. Wavelength is the distance from the peak of one wave to the peak of the next. The amount of energy in light waves or intensity, determined by a wave’s amplitude, or height, influences the brightness of the light 4 Intensity (Brightness) Intensity Amount of energy in a wave determined by the amplitude. It is related to perceived brightness. 5 Wavelength (Hue) Violet Indigo 400 nm Short wavelengths Blue Green Yellow Orange Red 700 nm Long wavelengths Different wavelengths of light result in different colors. 6 Intensity (Brightness) Blue color with varying levels of intensity. As intensity increases or decreases, blue color looks more “washed out” or “darkened.” 7 Purity (Saturation) Saturated Saturated Monochromatic light added to green and red makes them less saturated. 8 Color Solid Represents all three characteristics of light stimulus on this model. http://www.visionconnection.org 9 The Eye 10 Parts of the eye 1. Cornea: Transparent tissue where light enters the eye. 2. Pupil- a small adjusting opening that allows light to pass through 3. Iris: Muscle that expands and contracts to change the size of the opening (pupil) for light. 4. Lens: Focuses the light rays on the retina. 5. Retina: Contains sensory receptors that process visual information and sends it to the brain. 11 The Lens Lens: Transparent structure behind the pupil that changes shape to focus images on the retina. Accommodation: The process by which the eye’s lens changes shape to help focus near or far objects on the retina. 12 Retina Retina: The lightsensitive inner surface of the eye, containing receptor rods and cones in addition to layers of other neurons (bipolar, ganglion cells) that process visual information. 13 Optic Nerve, Blind Spot & Fovea Optic nerve: Carries neural impulses from the eye to the brain. Blind Spot: Point where the optic nerve leaves the eye because there are no receptor cells located there. This creates a blind spot. Fovea: Central point in the retina around which the eye’s cones cluster. http://www.bergen.org 14 Photoreceptors E.R. Lewis, Y.Y. Zeevi, F.S Werblin, 1969 15 Bipolar & Ganglion Cells The neural signals produced in the rods and cones activate the neighboring BIPOLAR cells, which then activate a network of GANGLION cells. The axons of ganglion cells converge to from the OPTIC NERVE, which carries visual information to the BRAIN. Where the nerve leaves the eye, there are no receptors; thus, the area is called the BLIND SPOT 16 Test your Blind Spot Use your textbook (E-BOOK). Close your left eye, and fixate your right eye on the black dot. Move the page towards your eye and away from your eye. At some point the car on the right will disappear due to a blind spot. 17 Fovea, Rods and Cones • Most cones are clustered around the retina’s point of central focus called the FOVEA, whereas the rods are concentrated in more peripheral visions of the retina. Many cones have their own bipolar cells to communicate with the visual cortex. • Cones- enable color • Rods- enable black and white vision • Unlike cones, rods are sensitive. Adapting to a darkened room will take the retina approximately 20 minutes. Visual Information Processing Optic nerves connect to the thalamus in the middle of the brain, and the thalamus connects to the visual cortex. 19 Feature Detection Ross Kinnaird/ Allsport/ Getty Images Hubel and Wiesel discovered that specific features called Feature Detectors. Examples include - respond to specific features, such as edges, angles, and movement. 20 Feature Detection • Feature detectors pass the information to higher level cells in the brain, which respond to specific visual scenes. Research has shown that in monkey brains such cells that specialize in responding to specific gazes, head angles, posture, or body movements. In may cortical areas, teams of cells supercell clusters respond to complex patters. Visual Information Processing Processing of several aspects of the stimulus simultaneously is called parallel processing. The brain divides a visual scene into subdivisions such as color, depth, form and movement etc. Other brain damaged people may demonstrate blind sight by responding to a stimulus that is not consciously perceived. 22 Tim Bieber/ The Image Bank From Sensation to Recognition 23 Theories of Color Vision Trichromatic theory: Based on behavioral experiments, Helmholtz suggested that the retina should contain three receptors that are sensitive to red, blue and green colors. An object appears to be red in color because it rejects the long wavelengths of red and because of our mental construction of the color. Standard stimulus Comparison stimulus Max Medium Low Blue Green Red 24 Theories of Color Vision • One out of every 50 people is color deficient; this is usually a male because the defect is genetically Subtraction of Colors If three primary colors (pigments) are mixed, subtraction of all wavelengths occurs and the color black is the result. 26 Addition of Colors If three primary colors (lights) are mixed, the wavelengths are added and the color white is the result. Fritz Goro, LIFE magazine, © 1971 Time Warner, Inc. 27 Photoreceptors Blue Cones MacNichol, Wald and Brown (1967) measured directly the absorption spectra of visual pigments of single cones obtained from the retinas of humans. Short wave Green Cones Medium wave Red Cones Long wave 28 Color Blindness Genetic disorder in which people are blind to green or red colors. This supports the Trichromatic theory. Ishihara Test 29 Opponent Colors Gaze at the middle of the flag for about 30 Seconds. When it disappears, stare at the dot and report whether or not you see Britain's flag. 30 Opponent Process Theory Hering proposed that we process four primary colors combined in pairs of red-green, blueyellow, and black-white. Cones Retinal Ganglion Cells 31 Color Constancy Color of an object remains the same under different illuminations. However, when context changes the color of an object may look different. R. Beau Lotto at University College, London 32