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Basic Visual Functioning

Basic Visual Functioning. Basic Visual Functioning. The processing of information, through perception and cognition, undergoes rapid development in infancy The limiting factor for the input to the information processing system is sensory processes that extract information

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Basic Visual Functioning

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  1. Basic Visual Functioning

  2. Basic Visual Functioning • The processing of information, through perception and cognition, undergoes rapid development in infancy • The limiting factor for the input to the information processing system is sensory processes that extract information • These sensory processes can be related to the developing nervous system

  3. Basic Visual Functioning • Vision works by processing information about the spatial environment • So we will look at the following aspects of spatial vision • Acuity and contrast sensitivity • Orientation selectivity • Eye movements

  4. Adult Basic Visual Functioning: Visual Acuity • Tested with preferential looking and VEP • VEP gives better acuity measures than looking • Trend is the same, however Preferential Looking

  5. Adult Basic Visual Functioning: Visual Acuity • Tested with preferential looking and VEP • VEP gives better acuity measures than looking • Trend is the same, however VEP

  6. Development of Visual Acuity

  7. Basic Visual Functioning:Visual Acuity • Acuity levels off after 6 mos. and reaches adult level by 1 year

  8. Basic Visual Functioning:Contrast Sensitivity • Differs from acuity in that it is concerned with the amount of brightness difference between light and dark regions

  9. Basic Visual Functioning:Contrast Sensitivity • Differs from acuity in that it is concerned with the amount of brightness difference between light and dark regions

  10. Basic Visual Functioning:Contrast Sensitivity • Overall sensitivity increases in early infancy • Peak sensitivity shifts to higher spatial frequencies (finer details) • Higher spatial frequencies are detectable

  11. Basic Visual Functioning:Acuity & Contrast Sensitivity • What accounts for their development? • Cone density in fovea is 1/3 of adult’s • Cone length is 1/10 of adult’s 1 month cone density 6 month cone density

  12. Basic Visual Functioning:Acuity & Contrast Sensitivity • What accounts for their development? • Lens does not accommodate to changes in distance • The axons of retinal ganglion cells, which form the optic nerve, have myelin sheath that is still developing • The lateral geniculate in the visual cortex continues to develop and progressively responds to higher frequencies (finer detail)

  13. Basic Visual Functioning:Orientation Selectivity • Acuity and contrast sensitivity give only the pattern of light and dark in the image of the world • In order for this information to be useful, the system must extract significant properties • Evidence suggests that processing in the early visual cortex is organized into groups of neurons that selectively respond to a particular pattern

  14. Basic Visual Functioning:Orientation Selectivity • One such selective pattern is orientation of the light and dark distribution in the image • Braddick, Wattam-Bell, & Atkinson (1986) used visually evoked potentials (VEP) • Simply switched the orientation of a stripe pattern and measured brain activity Sequence Phase Shift Orientation Shift Phase Shift Phase Shift Phase Shift

  15. Basic Visual Functioning:Orientation Selectivity • Braddick, Wattam-Bell, & Atkinson (1986) found that the VEP changed exclusively at the orientation shift by 6 weeks of age • Maurer & Martello (1980) have shown that behaviourally, via habituation, that 6-wk-olds will discriminate these orientation changes. Sequence Phase Shift Orientation Shift Phase Shift Phase Shift Phase Shift

  16. Basic Visual Functioning:Orientation Selectivity • Slater (1989), using novelty-preference, found evidence of orientation discrimination in newborns

  17. Basic Visual Functioning:Eye Movements • There are two types of eye movements • Saccades: Localize stationary objects • Pursuit: Track moving objects

  18. Basic Visual Functioning:Eye Movements • Saccades • By 1 month, infants can localize intended targets • However, they are not very accurate and are relatively slow • Becomes more adult-like by around 6 months of age • By 3 months, infants can make predictive saccades

  19. Basic Visual Functioning:Eye Movements • Saccades • Canfield, Smith, Brezsnyak, & Snow (1997) studied the stability of infants’ saccade latency • Adults’ typical minimum latency is approximately 133 milliseconds

  20. Basic Visual Functioning:Eye Movements • Pursuit • Aslin (1981) did the most detailed study of pursuit • Very difficult to detect in infants younger than 2 months of age • They make many saccades to track • By 6 months, they are able to track reliably, as does an adult

  21. Basic Visual Functioning:Eye Movements • Pursuit • However, Phillips, Finocchio, Ong, & Fuchs (1997) have found that even younger than 2 months will exhibit smooth pursuit if target is moving slowly (10 degrees per second) • Percentage of time actually tracking, even at slow speeds, also increases up to 6 months

  22. Visual Attention • Eye movements, as well as processing resources, need a target for them to be implemented • So, attention needs to select a target in the environment • Infant procedures, habituation and novelty-preference, tap into the attention mechanisms because they measure the amount of time infants selectively look at one stimulus versus another

  23. Visual Attention • Cohen (1972) suggested two components to performance on the looking tasks: • Attention-Getting and Attention-Holding • So he measured latency to fixate and duration of fixation to checkerboard patterns

  24. Visual Attention • Checkerboard size influenced latency • Number of checks influenced duration

  25. Visual Attention • Cohen suggests that after the attention-getting phase there is an attention-holding phase, during which processing of the stimulus event occurs • Richards (1988, 1991) measured heart-rate change to assess whether infants are in fact actively processing during attention-holding

  26. Richards (1988, 1991) • Richards found that during attention-holding, which he called “sustained attention”, heart-rate decelerated • Also found that infant is less likely to be distracted by a second stimulus when in heart-rate deceleration • Kagan found that this heart-rate deceleration showed a more systematic decline across stimulus repetitions with age Pre-Attention Attention Termination Orienting Sustained Attention

  27. Selective Attention • Visual Pop-Out • Stimuli with a unique property jump out from the surrounding environment and capture our attention • Sireteanu & Rieth vs. Atkinson & Braddick (1992) - used preferential looking to assess pop-out in infants

  28. Selective Attention • Sireteanu & Rieth found that 10 to 12-month-olds exhibited pop-out • Atkinson & Braddick found that 3.5 to 4.5-month-olds exhibited pop-out

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