Transcript Vision

Gestalt
Principles
Perceptual
Constancies
Basic
Principles
Visual
Illusions
We are
here
Perception
Sensation
Vision
Theories
Depth
Perception
The Eye
Pain
Other
Senses
Taste
Hearing
The Ear
Smell
Theories
Essential Task 4-2:
• Vision - relevant anatomical structures
– Path light travels (cornea, pupil, iris, lens, and
retina)
– optic nerve, blind spot and fovea
– Transduction (rods and cones)
• Color Vision
– The trichromatic theory of color vision
• Color Blindness
– Opponent process theory of color vision
• After-Image Effect
Vision
• Our most
dominating sense.
• Visual Capture
Phase One: Gathering Light
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The height of a wave gives us it’s intensity (brightness).
The length of the wave gives us it’s hue (color).
ROY G BIV
The longer the wave the more red.
The shorter the wavelength the more violet.
Phase Two: Getting the light in
the eye
Rods and Cones
Phase Three: Transduction
Transduction Continued
• Order is Rods/Cones
to Bipolar to Ganglion
to Optic Nerve.
• Sends info to
thalamus
• Then sent to cerebral
cortexes.
Phase Four: In the Brain
We have specific cells that see
the lines, motion, curves and
other features of this turkey.
These cells are called feature
detectors.
• Goes to the Visual
Cortex located in
the Occipital Lobe
of the Cerebral
Cortex.
• Feature Detectors.
• Parallel Processing
Parallel Processing
• Multitasking ability that lets our brain handle many
aspects simultaneously.
• In vision, we work separately and simultaneously
on color, movement, depth and form.
Color Vision
Two Major Theories
Trichromatic Theory
Three types of cones:
• Red
• Blue
• Green
• These three types of
cones can make
millions of
combinations of
colors.
• Does not explain color
blindness well.
With paint, the more colors you
mix, the fewer wavelengths of
light will be reflected. All paint
colors together = black.
With light, the more colors you mix,
the more wavelengths of light will be
reflected. All light colors together =
white.
Opponent-Process theory
Further up in the optic nerve,
neurons work in pairs to
help process color vision
signals
Red/Green
• Yellow/Blue
• Black/White
• If one color is
stimulated, the other is
inhibited.
Color Blindness
Dichromatic problems
with reds and greens
Dichromatic
Problems with
reds and greens
Dichromatic
Problems with
Blues and
Greens
Color Blindness Tests
Color Constancy: perceiving familiar objects as having
consistent color, even if changing illumination alters the
wavelengths reflected by the object.
our perception of color depends on context
Neuroscience of ghosts!