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eye as a camera Kandel, Schwartz & Jessel (KSJ), Fig 27-3
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eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

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Page 1: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

eye as a camera

Kandel, Schwartz & Jessel (KSJ), Fig 27-3

Page 2: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

retinal specialization •  fovea: highest density of photoreceptors, aimed at “where you

are looking” -> highest acuity

•  optic disk: cell-free area, where retinal nerve fibres exit the eyeball -> blind spot

KSJ, Fig 26-1

Page 3: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

demonstration of blind spot

Page 4: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

photoreceptors in the retina

Two types of photoreceptor cells: •  rods – abscent at fovea, more in periphery - mediate night vision •  cones – highest density at fovea - mediate day vision

Chaudhuri, Fig 9.1, 9.2

Page 5: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

dynamic range of light intensity

rods: lower threshold (higher sensitivity) cones: higher threshold (lower sensitivity):

Chaudhuri, Fig 9.9

Page 6: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

photopic vision - at high light intensities - colour vision - high resolution - low sensitivity - best in fovea - Stiles-Crawford effect - mediated by cones

scotopic vision - at low light intensities - achromatic - low resolution - high sensitivity - foveal scotoma - no Stiles-Crawford effect - mediated by rods

photopic vs scotopic vision

Page 7: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

rod monochromacy" congenital condition vision provided only by rods, without cone contribution

Rod monochromacy

Page 8: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

Neural circuitry in the retina three layers of retinal neurons:

outer nuclear layer – photoreceptors inner nuclear layer – bipolar and amacrine cells ganglion cell layer

Chaudhuri, Fig 9.11

Page 9: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

Electrophysiology of retinal neurons

receptive field: –  A small, circular region of the retina that affects response of a ganglion cell –  Equivalently, a small circular region of the visual field, within which a

light stimulus affects a ganglion cell’s response

Chaudhuri, Fig 9.12, 9.13

Page 10: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

Receptive fields of retinal ganglion cells Two kinds:

•  ON-center/OFF-surround cell: –  Centre circular region of receptive field is excited by light, surrounding

zone is inhibited by light. •  OFF-center/ON-surround cell:

–  Centre circular region of receptive field is inhibited, surrounding zone is excited by light.

Chaudhuri, Fig 9.13

Page 11: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

Receptive fields of retinal ganglion cells Retinal ganglion cells are optimized for detecting contrast:

•  Centre-surround antagonism: –  results from the concentric

spatial arrangement of the ON and OFF subregions

•  Consequence is that retinal output sent to the brain by ganglion cells is driven by light contrast, i.e. differences in luminance

Chaudhuri, Fig 9.14

Page 12: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

retina-LGN-cortex

KSJ, Fig 27-4

Page 13: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

LGN (lateral geniculate nucleus)

KSJ Fig 27-6

Page 14: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

LGN receptive fields

KSJ, Fig 29-11

achromatic

colour-opponent

Page 15: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

3 kinds of retinal ganglion cells parasol ("M") - 10 %

- project to magnocellular layers of LGN - large dendritic fields, large fibres - large receptive fields -> low spatial frequencies, high velocities - achromatic

midget ("P") - 80 %

- project to parvocellular layers of LGN - small dendritic fields, small fibres - small receptive fields -> high spatial frequencies, low velocities - colour-opponent (red-green, possibly blue-yellow)

bistratified (“K”) - 2 %

- project to koniocellular layers of LGN - blue-yellow opponent

Page 16: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

Visual angle •  Resolution:

–  Often express acuity in terms of visual angle –  Visual angle = angle subtended by image on the retina –  An object at a greater distance subtends a smaller visual angle

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_angle

Page 17: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

Sinewave gratings: spatial frequency spatial frequency: cycles per degree of visual angle

Chaudhuri, Fig 9.26

Page 18: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

contrast = (Lmax - Lmin) / (Lmax + Lmin) x 100%

100 % 50 % 25 % 12.5 %

Sinewave gratings: contrast

contrast sensitivity = 1 / contrast threshold

Page 19: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

Contrast sensitivity function

Measure minimum contrast to make a grating of a particular spatial frequency just visible. Plot threshold data in terms of sensitivity = 1 / threshold.

Chaudhuri, Fig 9.27

Page 20: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

sinewave gratings that move

temporal frequency!speed = -----------------------------! spatial frequency!! ! cycles/sec!deg/sec = ----------------! cycles/deg!

Page 21: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

contrast sensitivity after M-lesions

Merigan et al, Fig 2&3

Page 22: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

effects of M vs P lesions: summary

parvo lesion: - lower acuity - abolishes colour discrimination - reduced contrast sensitivity to gratings, at low temporal / high spatial frequencies (low velocities)

magno lesion:

- no effect on acuity - no effect on colour discrimination - reduced contrast sensitivity to gratings, at high temporal / low spatial frequencies (high velocities)

- does not support idea of magno for motion, parvo for form vision

Page 23: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

central problem: need for early detection

"at risk": ocular hypertension (OHT)

perceptual "filling in" - example is failure to see your "blind spot"

conventional (static) perimetry - detects problem only later

human psychophysics, as approach for early detection: why you would not expect a deficit on many tasks:

earliest lesions in peripheral vision, but many tasks use foveal vision

-> need to do perimetry (automated) using the task task may be mediated by unaffected neurons, e.g. color-discrimination (P-cells)

glaucoma: early detection

Page 24: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

Ganglion cell loss in glaucoma

Quigley et al, Fig 11

27 deg superior to fovea

strategy #1: earliest effects on larger diameter fibres ( -> M-cells) theory: intra-ocular pressure block effects greatest on larger diameter fibers

anatomy, in humans: fibre diameters, cell body sizes (Quigley et al) in animal models: experimentally raise IOP in monkeys (Dandona et al)

Page 25: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

motion coherence: stimulus

task: report direction of motion noisy random dots: prevent using change-of-position

a demanding task, requiring: combining responses of multiple neurons correct timing relations between neurons vary signal-to-noise (% coherence): best performance requires all the neurons

see Adler’s, Fig 20-12, 22-11

Page 26: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

motion coherence: psychophysical thresholds

% C

orre

ct R

espo

nses

Motion Coherence (%)

Page 27: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

motion coherence: loss in glaucoma

Joffe et al (Fig 2)

Page 28: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

apparent loss of large cells/fibres might be artifact of cell shrinkage also find losses of P-cell dependent psychophysics

selective M-cell loss hypothesis: criticisms

Page 29: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

strategy #2: most sensitive tests for capricious loss are those for sparse cell types:

(explains loss of abilities that depend on M-cells)

-> S-cones, blue/yellow (bistratified ganglion cells)

color: detection of blue spot on yellow background

rationale: blue-yellow ganglion cells (bistratified) are relatively sparse (ca 5%)

results: Sample et al, Johnson et al: perimetry, longitudinal study

testing for loss of sparse cell types

Page 30: eye as a camera - McGill University · 2017. 11. 21. · effects of M vs P lesions: summary! parvo lesion:!!- lower acuity!!- abolishes colour discrimination!!- reduced contrast sensitivity

general textbooks: Carpenter RHS (2003) Neurophysiology, (4th Ed) London: Arnold. Chaudhuri A (2011) Sensory Perception. Oxford: Oxford Press. Kaufman PL, Alm A (Ed) (2003) Adler's Physiology of the Eye, 10th ed. St.Louis: Mosby. Kandel, Schwartz, and Jessell , Principles of Neural Science (4th Ed.)   journal articles: Ansari EA, Morgan JE, Snowden RJ (2002) “Glaucoma: squaring the psychophysics and neurobiology” British Journal of Ophthalmology 86:823-826. http://bjo.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/86/7/823   Joffe KM, Raymond JE, Chrichton A (1997) "Motion coherence perimetry in glaucoma and suspected glaucoma" Vision Research 37:955-964.   Johnson CA, Adams AJ, Casson EJ (1993) "Blue-on-yellow perimetry can predict the development of glaucomatous visual field loss" Arch. Ophthalmol. 111: 645-650.   Maddess, T., Goldberg, I., Dobinson, J., Wine, S., Welsh, A.H., and James, A.C., “Testing for glaucoma with the spatial frequency doubling illusion”, Vision Research 39: 4258-4273 (1999).   Merigan WH, Byrne CE, Maunsell HR (1991) "Does primate motion perception depend on the magnocellular pathway ?" J. Neuroscience 11: 3422-4329.   Quigley HA, Dunkelberger GR, Green WR (1989) "Retinal ganglion cell atrophy correlated with automated perimetry in human eyes with glaucoma", Am. J. Ophthal. 107: 453-464.   Sample, P.A., Taylor, J.D.N., Martinez, G.A., Lusky, M., and Weinreb, R.N., "Short-wavelength color visual fields in glaucoma suspects at risk", Am. J. Ophthal. 115: 225-233 (1993).   Shapley R, Perry VH (1986) "Cat and monkey retinal ganglion cells and their visual functional roles", Trends in Neurosciences 9:229-235.  

References