Concept explainers
Watch this video (http://openstaxcollege.org/l/l_3-D1) to learn more about how the brain perceives 3-D motion. Similar to how retinal disparity offers 3-D moviegoers a way to extract 3-D information from the two-dimensional visual field projected onto the retina, the brain can extract information about movement in space by comparing what the two eyes see. If movement of a visual stimulus is leftward in one eye and rightward in the opposite eye, the brain interprets this as movement toward (or away) from the face along the midline. If both eyes see an object moving in the same direction, but at different rates, what would that mean for spatial movement?
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Chapter 14 Solutions
Anatomy & Physiology
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- What is meant by the statement Vision happens mainly in the brain?arrow_forwardAwareness of a stimulus is called a ________.arrow_forwardWatch this video (http://openstaxcollege.org/l/DanielleReed) to learn about Dr. Danielle Reed of the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia, PA, who became interested in science at an early age because of her sensory experiences. She recognized that her sense of taste was unique compared with other people she knew. Now, she studies the genetic differences between people and their sensitivities to taste stimuli. In the video, there is a brief image of a person sticking out their tongue, which has been covered with a colored dye. This is how Dr. Reed is able to visualize and count papillae on the surface of the tongue. People fall into two large groups known as tasters and non-tasters on the basis of the density of papillae on their tongue, which also indicates the number of taste buds. Non-tasters can taste food, but they are not as sensitive to certain tastes, such as bitterness. Dr. Reed discovered that she is a non-taster, which explains why she perceived bitterness differently than other people she knew. Are you very sensitive to tastes? Can you see any similarities among the members of your family?arrow_forward
- Watch this video (http://openstaxcollege.org/l/occipital) to learn more about a transverse section through the brain that depicts the visual pathway from the eye to the occipital cortex. The first half of the pathway is the projection from the RGCs through the optic nerve to the lateral geniculate nucleus in the thalamus on either side. This first fiber in the pathway synapses on a thalamic cell that then projects to the visual cortex in the occipital lobe where seeing, or visual perception, takes place. This video gives an abbreviated overview of the visual system by concentrating on the pathway from the eyes to the occipital lobe. The video makes the statement (at 0:45) that specialized cells in the retina called ganglion cells convert the light rays into electrical signals. What aspect of retinal processing is simplified by that statement? Explain your answer.arrow_forwardYour visual field is ______________. a. a specific, small area of the retina b. what you actually see c. the area where color vision occurs d. where the optic nerve startsarrow_forwardMatch each of the following terms with the appropriate description. _____ somatic senses (general senses)a.produced by strong stimulation _____ special sensesb.endings of sensory neurons or specialized cells next to them _____ variations in stimulus intensity _____ action potentialc.taste, smell, hearing, balance, and vision _____ sensory receptord.frequency and number of action potentials e.touch, pressure, temperature, pain, and muscle sensearrow_forward
- How do we perceive stimuli in everyday life. Describe this pathway (do not list) for vision OR olfaction using the key words listed below. (Note: Be sure you can do this for sound and balance too) Start with the stimulus and end with its perception in the cortex. (Note: words are in no particular order). Key words for vision: photoreceptor, retina, light, visual cortex, optic nerve (CN II), action potentials, optic chiasm, optic tract, LGN of thalamus, “I see light!” Key words for olfaction: odorant, olfactory receptor cell, olfactory nerve (CN I), g-proteins, olfactory bulb, olfactory tract, olfactory cortex, action potentials, odor molecules. “I smell coffee!”arrow_forwardWhen we talk about the receptive field of a receptor cell or of a retinal ganglion cell, what are we are referring to? the area of the lateral geniculate nucleus of the thalamus to which that cell projects its axons the location in the primary visual cortex where we will find neurons that the cell is connected to the part of the retina in which that cell is located the part of the visual field where a stimulus must be in order to make that cell respondarrow_forwardLabel the major connections and structures in the visual systemarrow_forward
- Put the following in the correct order of the most direct visual processing pathway from eyes to brain. 1. Lateral geniculate neuron 2. Ganglion cell 3. Visual cortex neuron 4. Bipolar cell 5. Optic nerve 6. Photoreceptorarrow_forwardProvide a step by step list of visual sensation through visual processing. Begin at light entering the eye through signal transduction, to the circuitry involved in the brain in understanding the "what" and "where" of the object. Be sure to review the specific criteria outlined in the rubric.arrow_forwardDiscuss the visual pathways in motor control, from when the information is registered on the retina and finally reaching the spinal cord effectorsarrow_forward
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