Adler's Physiology of the Eye

Extrastriate Visual Cortex

What is extrastriate visual cortex? The term “extrastriate” refers to all visually responsive cortex other than primary visual (striate) cortex, and does not receive strong direct projections from the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) (see Chapter 30 ). A central hypothesis…

Processing in the Primary Visual Cortex

Overview: The primary visual cortex constructs local image features The visual system provides a description of the location and identification of objects that have survival value to the species. This description must be made in a dynamic world in which…

Processing in the Lateral Geniculate Nucleus (LGN)

The lateral geniculate nucleus: the gateway to conscious visual perception Conscious perception requires the visual information that passes through the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) in primates. Although the retina sends axons to many subcortical nuclei, only the pathway from…

Optic Nerve

Introduction The two optic nerves carry the axons of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), and along these axons transmit all of the visual information from the inner retina ( Chapter 23 ) to the brain ( Chapter 29, Chapter 30, Chapter…

Ganglion-Cell Photoreceptors and Non-Image-Forming Vision

Overview In the past decade, compelling evidence has emerged for a novel class of photoreceptors in the mammalian retina. These neurons are ganglion cells that express the photopigment melanopsin and respond autonomously to bright light with a sustained depolarization and…

Regulation of Light through the Pupil

The pupillary opening appears to occupy a central location, but if carefully measured, it is actually situated slightly inferior and nasal to the center of the cornea. Thus, the pupil center may not correspond exactly to the optical axis defined…

Electroretinogram of Human, Monkey and Mouse

Introduction The electroretinogram (ERG) is a useful tool for objective, non-invasive assessment of retinal function both in the clinic and the laboratory. It is a mass electrical potential that represents the summed response of all the cells in the retina…

Signal Processing in the Inner Retina

The inner plexiform layer (IPL) is the second synaptic layer of the retina ( Fig. 23.1 ) and the final stage for processing visual information before it leaves the eye. Visual signals from rod and cone photoreceptors are first processed…

Signal Processing in the Outer Retina

Light-evoked hyperpolarizing signals in rods and cones are transmitted to and processed by neurons in the rest of the retina through a complex, but highly organized network of electrical and chemical synapses. In the outer retina, photoreceptors are electrically coupled…