The visual signals from both eyes leave the back of the eye in the optic nerve and meet at a location called?
Optic Chiasm
Where do some of the fibers cross to the opposite side of the brain from the eye they came from?
Optic chiasm
What does it mean by the brain is contralateral?
Each hemisphere of the brain responds to the opposite side of visual field
Anything to the right of the point of central focus is the _________ visual field.
right
Anything to the left of the point of central focus is the _________ visual field.
Left
Which hemisphere is the right visual field processed by?
Left hemisphere
Which hemisphere is the left visual field processed by?
Right hemisphere
True or false? Both eyes cannot see both visual fields
FALSE; both eyes CAN see both visual fields
Where do 90% of signals from the retina proceed to?
LGN (lateral geniculate nucleus)
Where do 10% of signals from the retina proceed to?
Superior colliculus
a structure in the thalamus that relays visual information from the retina to the primary visual cortex
- receives more signals from the cortex than from the retina.
LGN
Superior colliculus
Feedback
The occipital lobe; the place where signals from the retina and LGN first reach the cortex.
Visual receiving area/ V1/ Striate Cortex
Explain pathway of the eye
Signals leave the eye and cross at the optic chiasm, make a stop in the LGN, and then proceed to the visual cortex.
Simple cortical cells
Orientation Tuning Curve
Complex cells
End-stopped cells/ feature detectors
What responds best to spots of light?
Retinal ganglion cells
Center-surround receptive field. Responds best to small spots but will also respond to other stimuli.
Ganglion cell
Center-surround receptive fields are very similar to the receptive field of a ganglion cell.
LGN
Excitatory and inhibitory areas arranged side by side. Responds best to bars of a particular orientation.
Simple cortical cell
Responds best to the movement of a correctly oriented bar across the receptive field. Many cells respond best to a particular direction of movement.
Complex cortical cells