FAQ’s Sensory Physiology
Lecture 1: The Eye
Q: Function
of Antagonist Surround-- how do you know which ganglion cells activities
increase or decrease at the edge? On the
web one ganglion cell increasing activity at the edge and one decreases, but
how can you tell?
A:
The receptive fields of two on center ganglion cells are shown. In the previous
diagram we saw that if all the receptive field were in
the light or the dark there is little change in activity. In the next diagram,
the one on the bottom decreases its activity. This is because only the only
part in the light is part of the inhibitory surround. The one on the top increases
its activity. This is because only the only part not in the light is part of the inhibitory surround. Thus there is
less inhibition of this cell.
Q:
The figure you showed with the yellow dot before adaptation and then after
adaptation. With the yellow dot becoming in the zero
velocity range. Please explain the last statement of our
notes. "The result is a percept of motion in the opposite
direction."
A:
If, before adaptation, you were to activate these neurons in your MT, you
would sense a slow motion say to the left. After
adaptation a stationary stimulus now actives them.
Lecture 2: The Visual Cortex
Q: Is
there a calcarine sulcus on both sides of the brain?
A: You should be able to answer this
yourself. Hint, where are things in the left and right visual field
represented?
Q: Does
the length of the line change firing rates for simple and complex cells or does
firing only change with orientation of the cells?
A: The cell would fire more for a line
that fills its receptive field than for a shorter line. But unlike end stopped
cells, it will not fire less for a very long line that extends beyond the
receptive field.
Q: In problem 10, where the optic chiasm is severed, is the reason why
the difference in what you see, as compared to an optic chiasm that’s severed
for objects that are far, is because when you focus on near objects your eyes
are somewhat crossed. By telling us the point of the plate that we are staring
at, does this allow us to determine what will and will not be visible?. Essentially anything farther than the point of focus will be visible since it will project to the
temporal side of each eye where the nerves are intact but anything closer will
not be visible since the optic chiasm is damaged.
Not quite right. A anything farther than
the point of focus will be Invisible
since it will project to the NASAL side of each eye where the optic chiasm is damaged
but anything closer will be visible since the nerves are undamaged. See top of
lecture 2 page 13.
Lecture 3: Visual Perception of Objects
Q:
When will both the what and where stream be activated
at the same time? A: When the task involves both perception and action. For example if
you had to pick up a pencil off a crowded desk you require the “what” stream to
rcognize the pencil and the “where” stream to
direction your arm to it.
Q: If
an object, say an animal, is never seen before how are cells in the IT respond?
A: Good
question. I’m not sure, but perhaps they don’t respond. But LOC cell would
because they respond to any object.
Lecture 4: Visual Perception of Motion
Q: On
page 13 of the notes there is a diagram of a white square moving from the center
of 4 circles and then into a segment of lines? Is this motion detected by
the MT or the what stream alone? A: It is detected by MT through the What
Stream.
Q:
The terms retinal slip and corollary discharge aren't very clear to me. Please explain. I also don't understand
the diagram on page 11 with the retinal slip and the corollary discharge acting
to determine the perception of motion. Please explain. A: Retinal slip. Is the
visual motion that the eye sees.
In
the figure, corollary discharge a copy of the command sent to the eye muscles
to rotate the eye.
Lecture 5: Association Cortex
Q: I
am confused about PTO lesion. Lecture note 5-10 says that in right PTO lesion,
the left side of the face is neglected no matter the face is shown to the right
or left of fixation.
But,
in the case of problems at the end of lecture5 such as problem1, the solution
is different. The person who has a right PTO lesion neglects the left side of
the room. I thought the person neglects the left side of objects in both
the right side and left side of the room.
This
concept is quite confusing. Can you explain this again for me?A: Yes I guess this is not well explained. It is a
question of where the frame is drawn i.e. what you are attending to. If you are
attending an object, then it is the left side of the object. If you are
attending a room, then the frame is the room, and you neglect the left side of
the room.
I
hope this helps.
Q: I am confused with question #4 in
lecture 5. How is it possible that a PTO patient neglects the upper
part of a watch after it is turned? I thought he will neglect the new left part.A: The watch is treated as an
object (i.e. a frame drawn around the object) with a left side, top side,
right side and bottom side. When the watch and its frame is turned, the left side is
now on the top. Your answer would be correct if it were represented in an
egocentric frame.
Lecture 6: Streams for Visually Guided Actions
Q: On page 6-9 of the notes, it
explains what occurs when visual stimuli are flashed in sequence and the
instruction is to saccade from one stimuli to the
other. In the upper diagram representing immediately after the visual stimuli
are presented, why is the location of activity in FEF still in the area of the
midline and not at point A or point B or somewhere between?. A: The foveal region of FEF fires between saccades. Its firing
maintains fixation. The diagrams show the activity of FEF before and after an saccade. The only time other regions of FEF fire is
during a saccade.
Lecture 7: Touch
Lecture 8: Muscle Sense
Lecture 9: Hearing
Q: (Re Diagram on 9-6). In other
words, does high frequency in a clarinet make a low sound, and vice versa? A: Each note also contains overtones; that
is the original note, plus twice the frequency, and 4 times the frequency etc.
How much of each varies from instrument to instrument and voice form voice.
Lecture 10: Balance
Q: Some
books say that VOR is a tri-synaptic reflex, but the problem set says has 4
synapses? What do we go by?A: The text books
are wrong. You work it out. Count them. Some text books forget the synapse
between the hair cell and the 8th nerve.
Lecture 11: Eye Movement
Lecture 12: Memory
Q: In Lecture 12, its says that visual cortex can be
consolidated afterthe critical period. Doesn't this
contradict Lecture 1 that says the visual system is plastic early in life i.e.
only during the critical period?A: The critical
period is an early phase in the development of the cortex in which neral connections are very plastic. A
cataract in one eye before the age of 1 will produce a profound lose of
binocular cells. A cataract at that develops late in life will have little
lasting effect after it is removed. But even in old age, the visual cortex can
be trained, with repetitive practice, to detect smaller and smaller breaks in a
line. That suggests that it retains some plasticity.