The Visual Neurosciences
Leo M. Chalupa, John S. Werner
- 出版商: MIT
- 出版日期: 2003-11-21
- 售價: $5,600
- 貴賓價: 9.8 折 $5,488
- 語言: 英文
- 頁數: 1808
- 裝訂: Hardcover
- ISBN: 0262033089
- ISBN-13: 9780262033084
-
相關分類:
人工智慧、資訊科學、Information-management
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商品描述
Description:
Visual science is the model system for neuroscience, its findings relevant to all other areas. This massive collection of papers by leading researchers in the field will become an essential reference for researchers and students in visual neuroscience, and will be of importance to researchers and professionals in other disciplines, including molecular and cellular biology, cognitive science, ophthalmology, psychology, computer science, optometry, and education.
Over 100 chapters cover the entire field of visual neuroscience, from its historical foundations to the latest research and findings in molecular mechanisms and network modeling. The book is organized by topic--different sections cover such subjects as the history of vision science; developmental processes; retinal mechanisms and processes; organization of visual pathways; subcortical processing; processing in the primary visual cortex; detection and sampling; brightness and color; form, shape,and object recognition; motion, depth, and spatial relationships; eye movements; attention and cognition; and theoretical and computational perspectives. The list of contributors includes leading international researchers in visual science.
Leo M. Chalupa is Professor in the Department of Ophthalmalogy and the Section of Neurobiology, Physiology, and Behavior at the University of California, Davis.
John S. Werner is Professor in the Department of Ophthalmalogy and the Section of Neurobiology, Physiology, and Behavior at the University of California, Davis.
Table of Contents:
Preface xiii I. HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS 1 1. Vision Structure and Function: The Early History
Mitchell Glickstein3 2. The Role of Single-Unit Analysis in the Past and Future of Neurobiology
Horace Barlow14 II. DEVELOPMENTAL PROCESSES 31 3. Molecular Regulation of Vertebrate Retinal Development
Colin J. Barnstable33 4. Neurotrophins, Electrical Activity, and the Development of Visual Function
Nicoletta Berardi and Lamberto Maffei46 5. Developmental and Genetic Control of Cell Number in the Retina
Robert W. Williams and Sally A. Moody63 6. Development of the Vertebrate Retina
Rachel O.L. Wong and Leanne Godinho77 7. The Development of Retinal Decussations
Carol Mason and Lynda Erskine94 8. The Development of Eye-Specific Segregation in the Retino-Geniculo-Striate Pathway
Barbara Chapman108 9. The Role of Neural Activity in the Development of Orientation Selectivity
Chiayu Chiu and Michael Weliky117 10. Mechanisms of Plasticity in the Visual Cortex
Nigel W. Daw126 11. Ontogenesis of Cortical Connectivity
Henry Kennedy and Andreas Burkhalter146 12. Neural Limitations on Visual Development in Primates
Lynne Kiorpes and J. Anthony Movshon159 13. Development of Spatial Selectivity and Response Timing in Humans
Anthony M. Norcia174 14. The Effects of Selected Forms of Early Visual Deprivation on Perception
Donald E. Mitchell189 15. Toward a Future for Aging Eyes
R.A. Weale205 III. RETINAL MECHANISMS AND PROCESSES 213 16. Visual Transduction by Rod and Cone Photoreceptors
Mary E. Burns and Trevor D. Lamb215 17. How Retinal Circuits Optimize the Transfer of Visual Information
Peter Sterling234 18. ON and OFF Pathways in the Vertebrate Retina and Visual System
Ralph Nelson and Helga Kolb260 19. Retinal Synapses
Martin Wilson279 20. Retinal Neurotransmitters
Robert E. Marc304 21. Excitation in the Retina: The Flow, Filtering, and Molecules of Visual Signaling in the Glutamatergic Pathways from Photoreceptors to Ganglion Cells
David R. Copenhagen320 22. Peptide and Peptide Receptor Expression and Function in the Vertebrate Retina
Nicholas C. Brecha334 23. Inhibition in the Retina
Malcolm M. Slaughter355 24. Anatomy, Circuitry, and Physiology of Vertebrate Horizontal Cells
Ido Perlman, Helga Kolb and Ralph Nelson369 25. Retinal Amacrine Cells
David I. Vaney395 26. Ganglion Cells in Mammalian Retinae
Paul R. Martin and Ulrike Grunert410 27. Retinal Ganglion Cell Excitability
Andrew T. Ishida422 28. Direction Selectivity in Retinal Ganglion Cells
Richard H. Masland451 29. Spatial Regularity among Retinal Neurons
Jeremy E. Cook463 IV. ORGANIZATION OF VISUAL PATHWAYS 479 30. The M, P, and K Pathways of the Primate Visual System
Ehud Kaplan481 31. Parallel Visual Pathways: A Comparative Perspective
Vivien A. Casagrande and Xiangmin Xu494 32. Organization of Visual Areas in Macaque and Human Cerebral Cortex
David C. Van Essen507 33. Communications between Cortical Areas of the Visual System
Jean Bullier522 34. Ventral and Dorsal Cortical Processing Streams
Leslie G. Ungerleider and Tatiana Pasternak541 V. SUBCORTICAL PROCESSING 563 35. The Visual Relays in the Thalamus
S. Murray Sherman and R.W. Guillery565 36. The Visual Functions of the Pulvinar
Christian Casanova592 37. Feedback Systems in Visual Processing
Adam M. Sillito and Helen E. Jones609 38. Light Responsiveness and Photic Entrainment of the Mammalian Circadian Clock
Johanna H. Meijer and Joseph S. Takahashi626 39. Learning from the Pupil: Studies of Basic Mechanisms and Clinical Applications
John L. Barbur641 40. Blindsight
Larry Weiskrantz657 VI. PROCESSING IN PRIMARY VISUAL CORTEX 671 41. Functional Connectivity in the Pathway from Retina to Striate Cortex
R. Clay Reid and W. Martin Usrey673 42. Cell Types and Local Circuits in Primary Visual Cortex of the Macaque Monkey
Edward M. Callaway680 43. Assembly of Receptive Fields in Primary Visual Cortex
David Ferster695 44. A Modern View of the Classical Receptive Field: Linear and Nonlinear Spatiotemporal Processing by V1 Neurons
Gregory C. DeAngelis and Akiyuki Anzai704 45. Beyond the Classical Receptive Field: Contextual Modulation of V1 Responses
Victor A. F. Lamme720 46. Contributions of Vertical and Horizontal Circuits to the Response Properties of Neurons in Primary Visual Cortex
Thomas R. Tucker and David Fitzpatrick733 47. Nonlinear Properties of Visual Cortex Neurons: Temporal Dynamics, Stimulus Selectivity, Neural Performance
Duane G. Albrecht, Wilson S. Geisler and Alison M. Crane747 48. Binocular Interaction in the Visual Cortex
Ralph D. Freeman765 49. From Binocular Disparity to the Perception of Stereoscopic Depth
Andrew J. Parker779 VII DETECTION AND SAMPLING 793 50. Formation and Acquisition of the Retinal Image
David R. Williams and Heidi Hofer795 51. Thresholds and Noise
Theodore E. Cohn811 52. Ideal Observer Analysis
Wilson S. Geisler825 53. Scotopic Vision
Walter Makous838 54. Visual Adaptation
Adam Reeves851 55. Rod-Cone Interactions in Human Vision
Steven L. Buck863 VIII. BRIGHTNESS AND COLOR 879 56. Brightness and Lightness
Adriana Fiorentini881 57. Color Appearance
Kenneth Knoblauch and Steven K. Shevell892 58. Chromatic Discrimination
Joel Pokorny and Vivianne C. Smith908 59. The Role of Color in Spatial Vision
Karen K. De Valois924 60. Pattern-Selective Adaptation in Color and Form Perception
Michael A. Webster936 61. Color Constancy
David H. Brainard948 62. Comparative Color Vision
Gerald H. Jacobs962 63. Molecular Genetics of Human Color Vision and Color Vision Defects
Maureen Neitz and Jay Neitz974 64. Linking Retinal Circuits to Color Opponency
David J. Calkins989 65. Neural Coding of Color
Russell L. De Valois1003 66. The Processing of Color in Extrastriate Cortex
Karl R. Gegenfurtner and Daniel C. Kiper1017 67. Improbable Areas in Color Vision
Semir Zeki1029 IX. FORM, SHAPE, AND OBJECT RECOGNITION 1041 68. Spatial Scale in Visual Processing
Robert F. Hess1043 69. Spatial Channels in Vision and Spatial Pooling
Hugh R. Wilson and Frances Wilkinson1060 70. Contour Integration and the Lateral Connections of V1 Neurons
David J. Field and Anthony Hayes1069 71. Shape Dimensions and Object Primitives
Charles E. Connor1080 72. Shape and Shading
Jan J. Koenderink and Andrea J. van Doorn1090 73. Visual Perception of Texture
Michael S. Landy and Norma Graham1106 74. Visual Segmentation and Illusory Contours
Robert Shapley, Nava Rubin and Dario Ringach1119 75. Global Yet Early Processing of Visual Surfaces
Yukiyasu Kamitani and Shinsuke Shimojo1129 76. Image Parsing Mechanisms of the Visual Cortex
Rudiger von der Heydt1139 77. Inferotemporal Response Properties
Keiji Tanaka1151 78. Invariant Object and Face Recognition
Edmond T. Rolls1165 79. The Ventral Visual Object Pathway in Humans: Evidence from fMRI
Nancy G. Kanwisher1179 X. MOTION, DEPTH, AND SPATIAL RELATIONS 1191 80. Motion Cues in Insect Vision and Navigation
Mandayam A. Srinivasan and Shaowu Zhang1193 81. The Middle Temporal Area: Motion Processing and the Link to Perception
Kenneth H. Britten1203 82. Merging Processing Streams: Color Cues for Motion Detection and Interpretation
Karen R. Dobkins and Thomas D. Albright1217 83. Functional Mapping of Motion Regions
Guy A. Orban and Wim Vanduffel1229 84. Optic Flow
William H. Warren1247 85. The Cortical Analysis of Optic Flow
Charles J. Duffy1260 86. The Perceptual Organization of Depth
Roland Fleming and Barton L. Anderson1284 87. Stereoopsis
Clifton M. Schor1300 88. Binocular Rivalry
Randolph Blake1313 89. Sensorimotor Transformation in the Posterior Parietal Cortex
Hans Scherberger and Richard A. Andersen1324 XI. EYE MOVEMENTS 1337 90. Gaze Control under Natural Conditions
Robert M. Steinman1339 91. Eye Movements in Daily Life
Michael F. Land1357 92. Selection of Targets for Saccadic Eye Movements
Jeffery D. Schall1369 93. Visual Perception during Saccades
David C. Burr and M. Concetta Morrone1391 94. Smooth Pursuit Eye Movements: Recent Advances
Stephen J. Heinen and Edward L. Keller1402 95. Neural Control of Vergence Eye Movements
Lawrence E. Mays1415 96. The Primate Frontal Eye Field
Charles J. Bruce, Harriet R. Friedman, Michael S. Kraus and Gregory B. Stanton1428 97. Changing Views of the Role of Superior Colliculus in the Control of Gaze
Neeraj J. Gandhi and David L. Sparks1449 98. The Dialogue between Cerebral Cortex and Superior Colliculus: Implications for Saccadic Target Selection and Corollary Discharge
Marc A. Sommer and Robert H. Wurtz1466 99. Cerebellar Control of Eye Movements
David S. Zee and Mark F. Walker1485 XII. ATTENTION AND COGNITION 1499 100. Visual Perception and Cognition in Honeybees
Shaowu Zhang and Mandayam A. Srinivasan1501 101. A Neural Basis for Human Visual Attention
Sabine Kastner1514 102. Neural and Behavioral Measures of Change Detection
Daniel J. Simons and Michael Silverman1524 103. The Role of Attention in Visual Cerebral Cortex
John H.R. Maunsell1538 104. Volition and the Prefrontal Cortex
Earl K. Miller and Jonathan D. Wallis1546 XIII THEORETICAL AND COMPUTATIONAL PERSPECTIVES 1561 105. The Evolution of the Visual System in Primates
Jon H. Kaas1563 106. Gestalt Factors in the Visual Neurosciences
Lothar Spillmann and Walter H. Ehrenstein1573 107. Neural Mechanisms of Natural Scene Perception
Jack L. Gallant1590 108. Principles of Image Representation in Visual Cortex
Bruno A. Olshausen1603 109 Local Analysis of Visual Motion
Eero P. Simonocelli1616 110. Visual Boundaries and Surfaces
Stephen Grossberg1624 111. How the Visual Cortex Recognizes Objects: The Tale of the Standard Model
Maximilian Riesenhuber and Tomaso Poggio1640 112. Plasticity of Orientation Processing in Adult Visual Cortex
Valentin Dragoi and Mriganka Sur1654 113. Synchrony, Oscillations, and Relational Codes
Wolf Singer1665 114. The Neuronal Basis of Visual Consciousness
Christof Koch and Francis C. Crick1682 List of Contributors C1 Index I1
商品描述(中文翻譯)
描述:
視覺科學是神經科學的模型系統,其發現對其他領域也具有相關性。這本由該領域領先的研究人員撰寫的大量論文集將成為視覺神經科學研究人員和學生的重要參考資料,對其他學科的研究人員和專業人士也具有重要意義,包括分子和細胞生物學、認知科學、眼科學、心理學、計算機科學、驗光學和教育等領域。
這本書包含超過100個章節,涵蓋了視覺神經科學的整個領域,從其歷史基礎到分子機制和網絡建模的最新研究和發現。該書按主題組織,不同的部分涵蓋了視覺科學的歷史、發展過程、視網膜機制和過程、視覺通路的組織、皮質下處理、主視覺皮質的處理、檢測和取樣、亮度和顏色、形狀和物體識別、運動、深度和空間關係、眼球運動、注意力和認知以及理論和計算觀點。貢獻者名單包括國際領先的視覺科學研究人員。
Leo M. Chalupa是加州大學戴維斯分校眼科學系和神經生物學、生理學和行為學部門的教授。
John S. Werner是加州大學戴維斯分校眼科學系和神經生物學、生理學和行為學部門的教授。
目錄:
前言
I. 歷史基礎
1. 視覺結構和功能:早期歷史 - Mitchell Glickstein
2. 單元分析在神經生物學的過去和未來中的作用 - Horace Barlow
II. 發展過程
...(省略部分內容)