(PSY 304) Chapter 5 - Vision
(PSY 304) Chapter 5 - Vision
(PSY 304) Chapter 5 - Vision
3. retina the rear surface of the eye, which is lined with visual
receptors.
4. bipolar cells eye neurons that receive information from the retinal cells
and distribute information to the ganglion cells
6. amacrine cells get information from bipolar cells and send it to other
bipolar, amacrine, and ganglion cells.
7. optic nerve the nerve that carries neural impulses from the eye to the
brain
8. blind spot the point at which the optic nerve leaves the eye, creating
a "blind" spot because no receptor cells are located there
1. NO receptors
2. located at the back of the eye
3. anything in the blind spot is visible to the other eye
10. midget ganglion The ganglion cells in the fovea of humans and other pri-
cells mates because each is small and responds to just a single
cone.
11. rods retinal receptors that detect black, white, and gray; neces-
sary for peripheral and twilight vision, when cones don't
respond
12. Cones retinal receptor cells that are concentrated near the center
of the retina and that function in daylight or in well-lit
conditions. The cones detect fine detail and give rise to
color sensations.
abundant in and near the fovea, are less active in dim light,
more useful in bright light, and essential for color vision.
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He found that people could match any color by mixing
appropriate amounts of just three wavelengths. Therefore,
he concluded that three kinds of receptors—we now call
them cones—are sufficient to ac- count for human color
vision.
16. visual field the part of the world that you see—before you can identify
the color.
17. negative color af- result of staring at a colored object for a prolonged length
terimage of time and then looking at a white surface
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it in response to yellowish light. After prolonged exposure
to blue light, the fatigued cell decreases its response.
19. color constancy the ability to recognize colors despite changes in lighting
22. red-green color most common form of color deficiency, people have trou-
deficiency ble distinguishing red from green because their long- and
medium- wavelength cones have the same photopigment
instead of different ones. The gene causing this deficiency
is on the X chromosome.
23. horizontal cells Specialized retinal cells that contact both the receptor cells
and the bipolar cells
24.
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lateral geniculate a place in the thalamus that receives impulses from the
nucleus optic nerve
27. parvocellular small cell bodies with small receptive fields in or near the
neurons fovea. Suited to detect visual details.
(means "small celled," from the Latin root parv, mean- ing
"small.")
28. magnocellular large cell bodies with large receptive fields that are distrib-
neurons uted evenly throughout the retina
29. koniocellular small cell bodies, similar to the parvocellular neurons, but
neurons they occur throughout the retina.
Within the damaged part of their visual field, they are un-
aware of visual input, unable even to distinguish between
bright sun- shine and utter darkness.
31. simple cell has a receptive field with fixed excitatory and inhibitory
zones.
The more light shines in the excitatory zone, the more the
cell responds.
The more light shines in the inhibitory zone, the less the
cell responds.
32. complex cells located in areas V1 and V2, do not respond to the exact
location of a stimulus.
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A complex cell responds to a pattern of light in a particular
orientation anywhere within its large receptive field
34. feature detectors neurons whose responses indicate the presence of a par-
ticular feature.
35. waterfall illusion suggests that you have fatigued the neurons that detect
downward motion, leaving unopposed the detectors for
the opposite motion.
36. retinal disparity the discrepancy between what the left and right eyes see.
37. sensitive period when experiences have a particularly strong and enduring
influence
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38. strabismus "lazy eye," a condition in which the eyes do not point in the
same direction.
40. secondary visual processes the information further and transmits it to addi-
cortex (area V2) tional areas
41. ventral stream through the temporal cortex the perception pathway or the
"what" pathway, because of its importance for identifying
and recognizing objects.
42. dorsal stream through the parietal cortex is the action pathway or the
"how" pathway, because of its importance for visually guid-
ed movements.
damaged:
1. They see objects but they don't integrate their vision well
with their arm and leg movements.
2. They can read, recognize faces, and describe objects
in detail but they cannot accurately reach out to grasp an
object.
3. While walking, they can describe what they see, but they
bump into objects, oblivious to their location.
4. Although they can describe from memory what their
furniture looks like, they cannot remember where it is
located in their house
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43. inferior temporal learn to recognize meaningful objects.
cortex
A cell that responds to the sight of some object initially
responds mainly when it sees that object from the same
angle, but after a bit of experience, it learns to respond
almost equally to that object from other viewpoints.
For example, one patient, when shown a key, said, "I don't
know what that is. Perhaps a file or a tool of some sort."
When shown a stethoscope, he said that it was "a long
cord with a round thing at the end." When he could not
identify a smoker's pipe, the examiner told him what it was.
He then replied, "Yes, I can see it now," and pointed out
the stem and bowl of the pipe. Then the examiner asked,
"Suppose I told you that the last object was not really a
pipe?" The patient replied, "I would take your word for it.
Perhaps it's not really a pipe"
45. fusiform gyrus brain area of the inferior temporal cortex that recognizes
faces
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significantly smaller than average and has fewer than
normal connections with the occipital cortex.
47. motion blindness being able to see objects but unable to see whether they
are moving or, if so, which direction and how fast
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