Last changed 3 Dec 1998 ............... Length about 2,000 words (18,000 bytes).
Then 21 Dec 2010
This is a WWW document by Steve Draper, installed at http://www.psy.gla.ac.uk/~steve/courses/vision/level1.html. You may copy it. How to refer to it.

Web site logical path: [www.psy.gla.ac.uk] [~steve] [courses] [vision] [this page]

Level 1: the first 6 vision lectures

Contents (click to jump to a section)

Contact details

Stephen W. Draper (Office hours)
Department of Psychology
University of Glasgow
Glasgow G12 8QQ U.K.
email: steve@psy.gla.ac.uk
WWW URL: http://www.psy.gla.ac.uk/~steve/
Phone: 0141-330 4961 (messages: 5089)
fax: 0141-330 5086

Preface

Level 1, Psychology
Perception and visual cognition
Section 4.4.8 (p.23 in the handbook ("course information documentation"))
Lectures 1-3. Week 7, term 1.
Chapter 4 (Bernstein et al., 4th edition)

This web page summarises the learning work associated with these 3 lectures.

To contact me, I suggest using email or coming to see me during my office hours. (My contact details are above.)

The six lectures

  1. Light and the eye (physics) pp.87-90 & 96-101
  2. Colour vision (perception) pp.101-106
  3. Visual processing in the brain (neurophysiology, information processing) pp.106-111
  4. Psychophysics: the classical constructs of psychophysics. pp.128-133
  5. Perceptual organisation pp.133-143
  6. Prior knowledge in perception pp.127; 144-147

Lecture summaries (cf. course handbook p.23)

A good technique is to copy each of these summaries on to a sheet of paper, widely spaced, to take into the lecture. You can use these to pre-structure notes you take during the lecture, and to check if the lecturer leaves something out: if so, ask a question.

Lecture 1 Light and the eye (physics) pp.87-90 and 96-101.

Sensory systems: the physics of visual perception.
Transduction, receptors, adaptation, coding.
Frequency, wavelength, and intensity of light.
Focussing, the lens, iris, cornea, pupil and retina of the eye.
Images, receptors, rods, cones and fovea.
Convergence and lateral inhibition.
Photoreceptors, interneurons, bipolar and ganglion cells.

Objectives: Students will be able to:
* state the nature of sensory systems
* define coding
* describe basic properties of light
* describe the basic structure of the eye

Lecture 2 Colour vision (perception) pp.101-106.

Colour vision and the perceptual aspect of the visual sensory system
Light wavelengths and intensity.
Hue, saturation, brightness.
Trichromatic theory: red, green, blue components.
Opponent-process theory, complementary colours: red/green, yellow/blue, black/white.
Colour blindness and anomalies.

Objectives: Students will be able to:
* describe the physical basis underlying colour
* outline theories and representations of colour

Lecture 3 Visual processing in the brain (neurophysiology, information processing) pp.106-111

The neurophysiology of vision and visual representations.
Visual pathways, optic nerve, optic chiasm, LGN, visual cortex.
Hierarchical and parallel processing.
Spatial frequencies and multiple scales.

Objectives: Students will be able to:
* describe the visual pathway and its components
* describe basic visual representations instantiated in the brain
* discuss the importance of representation

An OHP slide on four different aspects in neurophysiology (and diagrams)

An OHP slide on the relationship between anatomic terms for parts of the brain

Lecture 4 Psychophysics: the classical constructs of psychophysics. pp.128-133

Psychophysics: physics (stimuli) in; psychological output (e.g. behavioural choice).

The threshold problem and signal detection theory. ("Is X there or not?").

Judging differences between stimuli. ("Are two stimuli the same?")
JNDs -- Just noticeable differences, or difference thresholds.
Weber's law: JND = K I (a constant times Intensity of the stimulus).

Fechner's law: ("How big is the stimulus?")
Constant increases in I, less and less increase in perceived magnitude.
Stevens' power law.

Lecture 5 Perceptual organisation pp.133-143

The figure/ground problem

Gestalt principles of perceptual organisation:

Depth and distance cues: monocular and binocular

Constancy of: size, shape, brightness

(Visual Illusions)

Lecture 6 Prior knowledge in perception pp.127; 144-147

  • Three approaches to visual perception:
    Ecological What is it for? Functional, only works in a niche. Focusses on supporting action, not understanding. Denies BOTH top down and bottom up approaches, and argues for "direct" perception.

    Constructionist Data not enough; add knowledge of the world. Focusses on recognition and understanding.

    Computational Who cares? find out how a vision system could work. Has often (but not necessarily) tended to focus on bottom-up processing (see below); may be the least neglectful of the uses of vision for detecting surprises and danger.

  • Top down vs. bottom up processing
    Hypothesis first; or data first
    Guesses /expectations about objects first; or assemble cues

  • Effects showing the effect of prior knowledge (as well as current sensory input) i.e. supporting a constructionist view.

    Sample exam question

    "Describe the neurophysiology of the eye". (An outline answer plan is available.)

    Aspects of the lectures

    Each lecture can be thought of as having 3 aspects:

    Fundamental Concepts

    1. Representation (coding)

    2. A lot of our theory is easiest to think about as if perception consisted of a linear assembly-line of processing from light waves to final percept. One aspect of this is the old terminology of sensation vs. perception: reflecting an old and wrong idea that first there are physical stimuli, which are converted into sensations, which are then converted into percepts. Although an important part of the story, that is NOT really how it is: various different sources of data are combined. Examples of things that don't fit this include:
      • Why are there nerve paths back from the cortext to the LGN?
      • If you press your eyeball with your finger, the world seems to move: that is because your visual perception uses not only signals from the optic nerve but also signals from your eye muscles.
      • Our sense of balance and motion, and of motion sickness, comes from the combination and comparison of what we see, what we sense in our joints (proprioception), and what we sense in the vestibular system of our inner ears.
      In the end, we should be thinking about overall systems, and the convergence (and competition) of different sources of information.

    3. Types of observation (types of psychology)

      Physics - (neuro)physiology - information processing (computation) - perception. These are 4 perspectives, often pursued using quite different research techniques in different departments, on the same topic of perception. Realising which perspective is being used, and understanding how the different perspectives relate, is non-trivial and you can sometimes detect even experts making errors in this.

      These involve at least these kinds of research: Physical measures, neurophysiological observations, brain damage observations, perceptions (introspection, what the subject becomes conscious of), behavioural experiments, computational models.

      And they are used in various combinations. For instance psychophysics is when you do experiments that vary the physical input, and report the perceptual experience (or perhaps the behaviour) of the participant. These lectures are also about the relationship (for vision) of physics, neurophysiology, and the resulting perception; and how these revolve around and perhaps can be explained by representations.

    4. Schools of theory of perception

      The textbook (and lecture 6) talk about the constructionist, ecological, and computational approach to visual perception. These are not different disciplines or research techniques but different kinds of theory, which lead to focussing on different cases as particularly important. Although their most fervent proponents see these as incompatible and opposed to each other, others have seen the best view as lying in some combination of these views.

    5. Diagrams of neurophysiology

      Some of the different aspects involved in understanding perception fully are implied by the different kinds of diagram you see, or want to see, of the neurophysiology:
      • Physical layout: 3D facts, and how to recognise it for dissection
      • Sequence and connectivity: how the cells are connected together (NOT just to neighbours, but often to distant cells in very particular ways).
      • Function from high/overall perspective. I.e. what are the cells doing? What function do they carry out? What are they computing?
      • Evolution and development ("phylogeny" and "ontogeny"). How an anatomical structure relates to one in other animals

    Questions (Critical thinking)

    These usually do not have answers we agree on, but are interesting to try to answer. You are recommended to try to answer them both because you may find them interesting, and because you will understand and remember the associated issues (that you will be tested on) better.

    Steve's Questions

    Here are some questions that occurred to me in preparing the lectures, and which I couldn't immediately find answers for. I would like to know the answers, so let me know (by email) if you find them.

    Reading

    Bernstein,D.A., Clarke-Stewart,A., Roy,E.J. & Wickens,C.D. (1997) Psychology (Fourth edition) (Houghton Mifflin: New York) [The course textbook: read the whole of chapter 4 and 5 to expand on these lectures.]

    Bruce,V. & Green,P.R. (1990) Visual perception: physiology, psychology and ecology 2nd edition psy F10
    [Especially useful for lectures 5 and 6]

    Wandell, Brian A. (1995) Foundations of vision (Sunderland, Mass. : Sinauer Associates) Level 5 Main Lib Physiology RV8 1995-W
    [This is much deeper than you need to go: but you may still find parts of it interesting especially p.315 onwards.]

    R.N.Nesse & G.C. Williams "Evolution and the origins of disease" Scientific American Nov.1998 vol.279 no.5 pp.58-65
    [For a brief but interesting point on the blind spot.]

    Sacks,Oliver (1996) The island of the colour-blind (Picador) [Sacks is always interesting; and available in paperback.]

    Dawkins, Richard (1995) River out of Eden : a Darwinian view of life Level 5 Main Lib Biology R30 1995-D
    [This has a long discussion about evolution of the eye (roughly pp.65-84), and is easy to read. I believe it is also a Penguin paperback.]

    Robert Sekuler, Randolph Blake. (1994) Perception (third edition) (New York ; London : McGraw-Hill)
    Level 2 Short Loan Psychology F10 SEK
    [The appendix "Behavioral methods for studying perception" is an excellent short piece of extra reading on psychophysics.]

    The slides from another version of lectures 4-6.

    Some web notes on Gibson (cf. lecture 6), originally for a level 4 course.

    World wide web (WWW)

  • To see an illustration and use of the hue, saturation, and brightness representation of colour, look in the WWW browser you are now using. Look somewhere like "Options" then "General Preferences" then "Colours" then click on one of the colours you are allowed to change. You will probably then be offered a circle to set hue and saturation, and a slider for brightness.

  • Medical Guide - Anatomy of an Eye

  • A list of numerical facts about the eye and vision

  • A collection of visual illusions

  • A site for vision researchers

  • Autostereograms, just for fun
  • There is a general article on autostereograms in New Scientist 1993, Oct. 9 pp.26-29 "How to play tricks with dots" by H.Thimbleby & C.Neesham

    General instructions

    Some things for this section are available on the WWW. You can read them online and/or print them off. I have created a special page with the most relevant pointers, and you might want to look at other stuff on my home page.

    To get at all this: Go to a computer cluster and log on.
    Start up the WWW software (a "browser" like Netscape or Internet Explorer).
    The address (called "URL") of the special page is:
    http://www.psy.gla.ac.uk/~steve/courses/vision/level1.html
    My own home page is:
    http://www.psy.gla.ac.uk/~steve/

    Notes:

    Unlike printed books, documents on the web may be modified or deleted at any time.
    =>Because of this, you may need to check a page periodically to see if it has been updated: check the modification date if it has one (there is one at the top of this document).
    =>Because of this, citing such documents should take account of this. A sample citation might be:
    Draper (1997, April, 11) Adding (negotiated) learning management to models of teaching and learning [WWW document] URL: http://www.psy.gla.ac.uk/~steve/TLP.management.html (visited 1997, Nov, 5)
    For more on how to cite web documents, click on this.

    Related pages: [this page]         [lectures 4-6(last year's notes)]
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