What is most of the visual field
Binocular vision
What is the primary projections pathway?
Optic nerve axons from the nasal retina cross at the _ _ and joins axons from the _ _ of the other eye
Optic nerve axons from the nasal retina cross at the optic chiasm and joins axons from the temporal retina of the other eye
What makes up the optic tract?
the contralateral and ipsilateral axons together
What receives input from only one eye (left or right) (has 6 layers)
LGN
What makes up the optic radiations? Where are the optic rad. projected?
Which optic nerve axons cross at optic chiasm? (nasal or temportal)
NASAL, temporal stays ipsilateral
What is the hypothalamus for?
light info
What is the pretectum for?
reflex control of pupil and lens
What is superior colliculus for?
how is the lateral geniculate nucelus organized?
left and right LGN are organized into six distinct layers
LGN-> mono or binocular?
monocular! there is no intergration for depth or mvt at the thalmas
The LGN layes recieves what?
retinal ganglion cell inputs from either the left or right eye but NOT BOTH
What is not there in the LGN
binocular processing
What is preserved in the LGN
retinal receptive fields
What are the three retinal ganglion cells that project to LGN locations
Where do M ganglion cells project into?
What are their characteristics?
What do they not carry?
What do they respond to?
more rods than cones
Where do K ganglion cells project into?
What is their charactertics?
What is their role?
projections onto the retina are _ _ and _.
upside down and backwards
Parietal (Superior) Optic Radiations carry information from:
Superior retinal quadrants
Inferior visual field
Temporal (Inferior) Optic Radiations carry information from:
Inferior retinal quadrants
Superior visual field
Where is the meyer’s loop?
Temporal (inferior) optic radiations
How is the striated cortex organized?
binocular/monocular vision/macula and superior/inferior visual fields