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Ch 6: The Visual System pt 3

Ch 6: The Visual System pt 3. Seeing Color. The technical term for color is hue The color you perceive is largely due to the wavelength of the light reflected from the object. Theories of Color Vision. Component theory ( trichromatic theory)

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Ch 6: The Visual System pt 3

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  1. Ch 6: The Visual System pt 3

  2. Seeing Color • The technical term for color is hue • The color you perceive is largely due to the wavelength of the light reflected from the object

  3. Theories of Color Vision • Component theory (trichromatic theory) • 3 different types of cones, each with a different spectral sensitivity • The color of an object is determined by the ratio of activity of those 3 types of receptors • Based on the observation that any color can be made by mixing together 3 different wavelengths of light in different amounts

  4. Theories of Color Vision • Opponent-process theory • There are 2 different classes of cells in the visual system for encoding color & another for encoding brightness • Each of these 3 encodes 2 complementary colors • Complementary colors are pairs of colors that produce white when combined in equal measure (and white represents presence of all colors in equal amounts)

  5. Theories of Color Vision • Opponent-process theory cont. • One class signals red by changing its activity in one direction & signals green (red’s complementary color) by changing its activity in the other direction • Another class signals blue & its complement yellow • 3rd, brightness class, signals black & white • Based on the observations that complementary colors cannot exist together (ex: no such thing as bluish yellow) & that the afterimage of red is green and of yellow is blue

  6. Afterimages

  7. So which theory is right?? • There are 3 kinds of cones & each has different photopigment & its own characteristic absorption rate (sensitive to different wavelength ranges) • At the level of the cones, coding color seems to operate on a purely component basis • At the subsequent levels of the visual processing system (retina-geniculate-striate system), cells respond according to the opponent-process

  8. Animal vision • Mostly trichromats (3 photopigments) • Dichromats • Difficulty seeing long wavelengths (red end) • Some have a 4thphotopigment • Allows them to detect UV light

  9. Animal Vision http://webecoist.momtastic.com/2009/01/14/animal-vision-color-detection-and-color-blindness/

  10. Color Constancy • Color constancy: perceived color of an objects is not purely a function of the wavelengths reflected by it • The wavelengths of ambient light can alter the way a color looks • Allows us to recognize and remember objects even when we see them at different times/locations • Normally goes undetected by us • A color will always seem its same color as long as the ambient light has some short, medium & long wavelengths; and that the object is viewed in a scene

  11. Color Constancy

  12. Retinex Theory • States that the color of an object is determined by its reflectance (the proportion of light of different wavelengths that a surface reflects) • Visual system calculates reflectance & perceives color by comparing the light reflected by adjacent surfaces in at least 3 different wavelength bands (short, med, long) • Suggests that there is one type of cortical neuron involved in color vision • Neurons that should be responsive to color contrast • These type of neurons do exist • Ex: dual-opponent color cells in the monkey cortex turn on

  13. Cortical Mechanisms of Vision • The primary visual cortex is not the only area involved in human vision (retinal-geniculate-striate pathway) • All of the occipital cortex and large parts of the temporal & parietal lobes are involved • Secondary visual cortex • Receives input from primary visual cortex • Visual association cortex • Gets input from secondary visual cortex & other sensory systems

  14. Location of Visual System • Primary • Posterior area of occipital lobe • Secondary • Prestriate cortex • Band of tissue that surrounds primary visual cortex • Inferotemporal cortex • Association • Posterior parietal cortex • *Flow of information goes along this direction*

  15. Damage to the Visual System • Scotoma: an area of blindness caused by damage to an area of the primary visual system • Blind area corresponds to area of the contralateral visual field of both eyes • Can be tested with a perimetry test • Used to map the visual field of each eye • Many people with scotomas don’t realize they have deficient vision • Hemianopsic: A patient with a scotoma covering half of the visual field

  16. Damage to the Visual System • Just because you can see something doesn’t necessarily mean you are consciously aware of seeing it • Blindsight: • Ability of patients with scotomas to respond to visual stimuli in their scotoma even though they are not aware of the stimuli • When damage is done to the primary visual cortex, movement/motion is the characteristic of visual stimuli likely to still be perceived • Ex: a patient may grab an object that moves through his scotoma, despite reporting they saw nothing

  17. 2ndary & Association Cortex • Different areas of the visual cortex are involved in different functions of vision • Ex: Some areas associated with visual properties of color, movement, shape, etc. • But keep in mind that brain areas and functions are all very interconnected & can potentially “pick up the slack” for one area if it is damaged

  18. Dorsal & Ventral Streams • 2 main pathways that conduct neural signals about vision from the primary to secondary/association cortices • Dorsal • From the primary to dorsal prestriate cortex to posterior parietal cortex [secondary to association] • Ventral • From primary to ventrialprestriate cortex to inferotemporal cortex [secondary]

  19. Dorsal & Ventral Streams • Dorsal • Neurons here respond strongly to spatial stimuli, location of objects & direction of movement • Ventral • Responds to characteristics of objects (color, shape, etc.) • There are clusters of neurons that respond to specific classes of objects; ex: faces, bodies, letters, animals, tools • “Where” vs “What” Theory • Dorsal & ventral streams have different visual functions

  20. Dorsal & Ventral Streams

  21. Dorsal & Ventral Streams • “Where” vs “What” Theory • Dorsal & ventral streams have different visual functions • “Control of Behavior” vs “Conscious Perception” Theory • Difference between the streams is not the kind of info they carry, but what they do with it • Suggested that this theory encompasses the above theory

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