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7: Sensation and Perception- The Visual System

  • Page ID
    151238
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    • 7.1: Introduction
      This page explores the distinction between sensation and perception, particularly in relation to human experience and the visual system. Through an anecdote about Mammoth Cave, it illustrates disorientation from a lack of visual input. Sensation is defined as the detection of stimuli, while perception is the interpretation of these stimuli, influenced by past experiences.
    • 7.2: The Eye
      This page explains the process of visual sensation, starting with the eye's capture of photons that determine color perception. The human eye detects wavelengths from 400 nm to 700 nm. For vision, photons must reflect off objects and reach the retina, facilitated by the cornea and lens, which adjusts for focus. The pupil changes size based on light conditions, and the movement of the eye is controlled by six extraocular muscles, showcasing the intricate anatomy and function of the visual system.
    • 7.3: The Retina
      This page explores the structure and function of the retina, highlighting its division into medial and lateral segments, and key areas like the fovea. It details the roles of rods and cones in vision, known as the duplicity theory, and how color vision deficiencies stem from cone dysfunction. The process of phototransduction is explained, emphasizing the functions of opsins and the interaction between various retinal cells.
    • 7.4: The Optic Nerve
      This page explains the function of the optic nerve (cranial nerve II), detailing its pathway from the eyes to the optic chiasm and thalamus. It highlights how visual information from the nasal and temporal hemiretinas is processed in opposite and same hemispheres, respectively. The page also covers reflexive and circadian pathways linked to the optic nerve and notes that conditions like glaucoma can cause optic nerve damage and result in blindness.
    • 7.5: Visual perception in the brain
      This page covers the structure and function of the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) in the thalamus, where the optic nerve's first synapse occurs, detailing the types of LGN neurons and the organization of visual information to the primary visual cortex. It introduces the dual-stream hypothesis on visual processing pathways. Additionally, it discusses eye tracking and saccades, how they facilitate the brain's understanding of visual stimuli by analyzing eye movement patterns.
    • 7.6: References


    This page titled 7: Sensation and Perception- The Visual System is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Austin Lim via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.