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Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN
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Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

Psychology 4051

The Retina and LGN

Page 2: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway

Page 3: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

The Retina

• Located at the back of the posterior chamber, forms the inner tunic of the eye.

• Surface on which the visual image is focused

Page 4: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

The Retina

• A laminar tissue with multiple layers.– Pigment epithelium, photoreceptor layer, external

limiting membrane, outer nuclear layer, outer plexiform layer, inner nuclear layer, inner plexiform layer, ganglion cell layer, optic nerve layer, internal limiting membrane.

• Transduction takes place in the photoreceptors.– Rods and cones

Page 5: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

• Light hits the outer segment of rods and cones which contain photosensitive chemicals (photopigments). • Rod-rhodopsin cones-iodopsin

• The light changes the molecular properties of the photopigments, which in turn changes the electrical state of these cells – this is called transduction.

Page 6: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

The Retina

Light

The design of the retina is unusual.Light must pass through 8 layers Before it hits the Photoreceptors.

Page 7: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

The Retina

• The retina contains a central pit, above which cell layers are pushed away. – The fovea: 1mm in diameter– Packed with cones

Page 8: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

foveaFovea•At the center of the retina, high acuity•Reduced light distortion

Page 9: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

The Retina

• Rods and cones connect with horizontal and bipolar cells (collector cells).

• Lateral interaction takes place at horizontal cells.

• Bipolar cells are connected to retinal ganglion cells.

• Amacrine cells connect adjacent bipolar cells.

Page 10: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

Rods

• 120 million rods in the human retina• Concentrated in the periphery of the retina

Page 11: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

• Extremely sensitive to light.• Many rods converge onto a

single retinal ganglion cell (RGC)

Rods

Page 12: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

Rods – good light sensitivity

• As a result, low levels of light can be detected– Responsible for night

vision

• But, spatial resolution is very poor– RGCs can not determine

which rods were stimulated

Page 13: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

Cones

• Approximately 6 million cones• Cones are packed densely in the fovea

Page 14: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

Cones• Cones are

connected to bipolar cells, then to retinal ganglion cells (RGCs)

• Few cones converge onto a single retinal ganglion cell (RGC)– As a result,

resolution is excellent

Page 15: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

Cones

• Light sensitivity is poor– Day vision

Page 16: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

Cones

• Humans have 3 different cone types, each with a different photopigment.

• Photopigments are maximally sensitive to specific wavelengths.– Short wavelength sensitive– Mid-wavelength sensitive– Long wavelength sensitive

Page 17: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

Retinal Ganglion Cells

• Retinal ganglion cells possess receptive fields that are responsive to light stimulation.

• Receptive field – that area of the retina over which a ganglion cell is sensitive to light stimulation (area of the retina that the RGC monitors).

Page 18: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

Receptive Fields

• Their receptive fields are designed in an antagonistic fashion

• A single receptive field has an on-center/off- surround arrangement or an off-center/on-surround arrangement.

Page 19: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

“On-Center” Cells• On-center cell: Light stimulation of the center of

the receptive field produces depolarization and an increase in the firing rate of the ganglion cell.

• Stimulation of the surround produces a hyperpolarization and a decrease in the firing rate of the cell.

+-

Page 20: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

“Off-Center” Cells• Off-center cell: Light stimulation of the surround

of the receptive field produces depolarization and an increase in the firing rate of the ganglion cell.

• Stimulation of the center produces a hyperpolarization and a decrease in the firing rate of the cell.

-+

Page 21: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

Retinal Ganglion Cells

• The axons of the RGCs converge and leave the eye through as the optic nerve.

• They connect to the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN).

Page 22: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.
Page 23: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

Retinal Ganglion Cells

• Most RGCs fall into two functional classes, M and P cells

• M cells – project to the magnocellular layers of the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN)

• P cells – project to the parvocellular layers of the LGN

Page 24: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

M Cells• M cells receive input from a relatively large

number of photoreceptors (mostly input from rods)

• Good light sensitivity, good temporal resolution (sensitive to motion)

• Poor spatial resolution• Large – with broad axons and consequently

faster nerve conduction velocities• Not color-sensitive

Page 25: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

P Cells

• P cells receive input from a relatively small number of photoreceptors (mostly input from cones)

• Good spatial resolution• Poor temporal resolution• Colour sensitivity

Page 26: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

LGN

• A six-layered thalamic relay station

Page 27: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

LGN

• Cells in the magnocellular layer have large cell bodies and long, straight axons.

• Cells in the parvocellular layer possess smaller cell bodies and short, curved axons.

• Layers 1, 4, and 6 receive input from the contralateral eye.

• Layers 2, 3, and 5 receive input from the ipsilateral eye.

Page 28: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.
Page 29: Psychology 4051 The Retina and LGN. Retino-Geniculate-Cortical Pathway.

LGN

• Most parvocellular cells appear to be responsive to color and have center/surround receptive fields.