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vision Test

Enter the letter for the matching Answer
incorrect
1.
Parvocellular neuron
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2.
End-stopped (hypercomplex) cell
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3.
Ganglion cell
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4.
Magnocellular neuron
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5.
Primary visual cortex (area V1)
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6.
Cone
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7.
Lateral inhibition
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8.
Shape constancy
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9.
Motion blindness
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10.
Binocular input
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11.
MST
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12.
Rod
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13.
Complex cell
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14.
Inferior temporal cortex
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15.
Strabismus
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16.
Color vision deficiency
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17.
Feature detector
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18.
Saccade
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19.
Midget ganglion cells
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20.
Sensitive period
A.
type of neuron in the retina that receives input from the bipolar cells
B.
ability to perceive the shape of an object despite the movement or rotation of the object
C.
ganglion cells in the fovea of humans and other primates
D.
cell of the visual cortex that responds best to stimuli of a precisely limited type, anywhere in a large receptive field, with a strong inhibitory field at one end of its field
E.
type of retinal receptor that contributes to color perception
F.
large-celled neuron of the visual system that is sensitive to changing or moving stimuli in a relatively large visual field
G.
area of the cortex responsible for the first stage of visual processing
H.
impaired ability to perceive the direction or speed of movement, despite otherwise satisfactory vision
I.
condition in which the two eyes point in different directions
J.
medial superior temporal cortex, an area in which neurons are sensitive to expansion, contraction, or rotation of the visual field or to the movement of an object relative to its background
K.
inability to perceive color differences as most other people do
L.
restraint of activity in one neuron by activity in a neighboring neuron
M.
type of retinal receptor that does not contribute to color perception
N.
stimulation from both eyes
O.
time early in development during which some event (e.g., an experience or the presence of a hormone) has a strong and long-lasting effect
P.
small-celled neuron of the visual system that is sensitive to color differences and visual details in its small visual field
Q.
neuron whose responses indicate the presence of a particular feature
R.
portion of the cortex where neurons are highly sensitive to complex aspects of the shape of visual stimuli within very large receptive fields
S.
cell type of the visual cortex that responds best to a light stimulus of a particular shape anywhere in its receptive field; its receptive field cannot be mapped into fixed excitatory and inhibitory zones
T.
ballistic movement of the eyes from one fixation point to another
Type the Question that corresponds to the displayed Answer.
incorrect
21.
area in the center of the human retina specialized for acute, detailed vision
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22.
type of visual cortex cell that has fixed excitatory and inhibitory zones in its receptive field
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23.
visual path in the parietal cortex, sometimes known as the where or how pathway
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24.
ganglion cells located throughout the retina
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25.
rear surface of the eye, lined with visual receptors
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26.
ability to localize objects within an apparently blind visual field
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27.
type of neuron in the retina that receives input directly from the receptors
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28.
area of the world that an individual can see at any time
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29.
type of cell that receives input from receptors and delivers inhibitory input to bipolar cells
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30.
concept that when information from various parts of the retina reaches the cortex, the cortex compares each of the inputs to determine the color perception in each area

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Created by: jondoh
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