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This lecture explores the role of the lateral geniculate nucleus, different cell types in the visual cortex, and the processing of visual information. Topics include channel coding, adaptation, cortical organization, and spatial vision.
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PSYCH 2220 Perception Lecture 5
Keywords for lecture 4 Lateral geniculate nucleus, layers, magnocellular, parvocellular, magnification factor, simple cells, complex cells, hypercomplex cells, Hubel and Wiesel cortical cells tuned for orientation, binocular, tuned for width-of-bars, movement, direction, tilt after effect, adaptation, channel coding
Response before adaptation for each channel... .. Is reduced depending on each channel’s adaptation. The peak of the extrapolated curve… .. Is thus shifted. Hypothetical channels Amount of adaptation
Response before adaptation for each channel... .. Is reduced depending on each channel’s adaptation. The peak of the extrapolated curve… .. Is thus shifted. Hypothetical channels Amount of adaptation
Response before adaptation for each channel... .. Is reduced depending on each channel’s adaptation. The peak of the extrapolated curve… .. Is thus shifted. Hypothetical channels Amount of adaptation
Visualizing orientation columns in the cortex (Using radioactive deoxyglucose)
What happens beyond the hypercomplex cells? Grandmother cells heirarchy prosopagnosia face cells; hand cells anatomy
transient cells magnocellular layers of LGN parvocellular layers of LGN sustained cells
Stimuli used to investigate processing of cells in the inferotemporal region. The image of the monkey’s hand elicited the largest response…. ...from a cell in the Inferotemporal cortex
A face cell…. ...from the Inferotemporal cortex
Fourier’s theorem: “any complex curve can be mathematical described as the sum of a series of sine waves”
Just low frequencies all frequencies
invisible Threshold contrast visible Spatial Frequency
Photopic Threshold contrast Scotopic Spatial Frequency