Physiology of vision Flashcards

1
Q

What is the direct vertical pathway for signal transmission in the retina?

A

Photoreceptors -> bipolar cells -> ganglion cells (direction of signal, direction of light is opposite to this)

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2
Q

Where to horizontal cells receive input from and project to?

A

Receive input from photoreceptors and project to other photoreceptors and bipolar cells

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3
Q

Where do amacrine cells receive input from and project to?

A

Receive input from bipolar cells and project to bipolar cells, ganglion cells and other amacrine cells

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4
Q

Light converts 11-cis-Retinal into what?

A

All-trans-Retinal (activated form)

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5
Q

What is rhodopsin?

A

Opsin + 11-cis-retinal

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6
Q

What are the features of rods?

A

Allow us to see in dim light, high convergence, high sensitivity to light, low visual acuity, found in the peripheral retina

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7
Q

What are the features of cones?

A

Allow us to see in normal daylight, low convergence, colour vision, low light sensitivity, high visual acuity

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8
Q

There are 3 types of cone. Name these and describe which wavelength of light they absorb

A

Short wave cone - blue light
Middle wave cone - green light
Long wave cone - red light

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9
Q

What does lateral inhibition within the retina do?

A

Exaggerates the difference in stimulus intensity detected by adjacent neurons, aids with localisation

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10
Q

Horizontal cells interconnect a group of surround neurons. It samples the total amount of excitation in the surround and responds by releasing GABA. If there was low surround, what would happen to the amount of GABA released?

A

Less GABA would be released. The response of the centre on bipolar cells is thus higher

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11
Q

What do center-surround/lateral inhibition serve to emphasise?

A

Contrast i.e. it sharpens the boundary between objects of different luminance

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12
Q

How does lateral inhibition modify the receptive fields of ganglion cells?

A

It modifies the RFs of ganglion cells to have a center surround organisation i.e. ON center - OFF surround or OFF center ON surround

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13
Q

How is the retina divided relative to the fovea?

A

Divided in half into a nasal and temporal hemiretina

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14
Q

What percentage of light crosses over at the optic chiasm?

A

60% cross (nasal retina) and 40% do not (temporal retina)

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15
Q

What visual defect would occur due to a lesion at position A?

A

Monocular blindness

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16
Q

What visual defect would occur due to a lesion at position B?

A

Bitemporal hemianopia

17
Q

What visual defect would occur due to a lesion at position C?

A

Contralateral heminopia

18
Q

What visual defect would occur due to a lesion at position D?

A

Superior quadrantopia

19
Q

What visual defect would occur due to a lesion at position E?

A

Hemianopia with foveal sparing

20
Q

First binocular neurons are found in the striate cortex. Most layer III neurons are monocular (but not layer IV) - T/F?

A

False - first binocular neurons are found in the striate cortex. Most layer III neurons are BINOCULAR, but not layer IV

21
Q

What is the competition hypothesis?

A

Connections from the two eye compete with each other in the cortex

22
Q

Why are retinal synapses in the lateral geniculate nucleus not affected by monocular deprivation?

A

Because they are monocular. In the cortex, monocular deprivation during a critical period in development results in active afferents from one eye and lower activity from the other eye