The spatial relationships among the ganglion cells in the retina are maintained in their central targets as orderly representations or “maps” of visual space. Importantly, information from the left half of the visual world is represented in the right half of the brain, and vice versa.
Figure 12.4
.
Projection of the visual fields onto the left and right retinas. (A) Projection of an image onto the surface of the retina. The passage of light rays through the optical elements of the eye results in images that are inverted and left-right reversed on the retinal surface. (B) Retinal quadrants and their relation to the organization of monocular and binocular visual fields, as viewed from the back surface of the eyes. Vertical and horizontal lines drawn through the center of the fovea define retinal quadrants (bottom). Comparable lines drawn through the point of fixation define visual field quadrants (center). Color coding illustrates corresponding retinal and visual field quadrants. The overlap of the two monocular visual fields is shown at the top.
Understanding the neural basis for this arrangement requires considering how images are projected onto the two
retinas, and which parts of the two
retinas cross at the
optic chiasm. Each eye sees a part of visual space that defines its
visual field (). For descriptive purposes, each
retina and its corresponding
visual field are divided into quadrants. In this scheme, the surface of the
retina is subdivided by vertical and horizontal lines that intersect at the center of the
fovea (). The vertical line divides the
retina into nasal and
temporal divisions and the horizontal line divides the
retina into
superior and
inferior divisions. Corresponding vertical and horizontal lines in visual space (also called meridians) intersect at the
point of fixation (the point in visual space that the
fovea is aligned with) and define the quadrants of the
visual field. The crossing of light rays diverging from different points on an object at the
pupil causes the images of objects in the
visual field to be inverted and left-right reversed on the retinal surface as the rays are focused. As a result, objects in the temporal part of the
visual field are seen by the nasal part of the
retina, and objects in the superior part of the
visual field are seen by the inferior part of the
retina. (It may help in understanding to imagine that you are looking at the back surfaces of the
retinas, with the corresponding
visual fields projected onto them.)
With both eyes open, the two
foveas are normally aligned on a single target in visual space, causing the
visual fields of both eyes to overlap extensively (see and ). This
binocular field of view consists of two symmetrical visual hemifields (left and right). The left
binocular hemifield includes the nasal
visual field of the right eye and the temporal
visual field of the left eye; the right hemifield includes the temporal
visual field of the right eye and the nasal
visual field of the left eye. The temporal
visual fields are more extensive than the nasal
visual fields, reflecting the size of the nasal and temporal
retinas respectively. As a result, vision in the periphery of the field of view is strictly monocular, mediated by the most
medial portion of the nasal
retina. Most of the rest of the field of view can be seen by both eyes; i.e., individual points in visual space lie in the nasal
visual field of the other. It is worth noting, however, that the shape of the face and nose impact the extent of this region of
binocular vision. In particular, the inferior nasal
visual fields are less extensive than the superior nasal fields, and consequently the
binocular field of view is smaller in the lower
visual field than in the upper (see ).
Ganglion cells that lie in the nasal division of each
retina give rise to
axons that cross in the chiasm, while those that lie in the temporal
retina give rise to
axons that remain on the same side (see ). The boundary (or line of
decussation) between contralaterally and ipsilaterally projecting
ganglion cells runs through the center of the
fovea and defines the border between the nasal and temporal hemiretinas. Images of objects in the left visual hemifield (such as point B in ) fall on the nasal
retina of the left eye and the temporal
retina of the right eye, and the
axons from
ganglion cells in these regions of the two
retinas project through the right
optic tract. Objects in the right visual hemifield (such as point C in ) fall on the nasal
retina of the right eye and the temporal
retina of the left eye; the
axons from
ganglion cells in these regions project through the left
optic tract. As mentioned previously, objects in the monocular portions of the visual hemifields (points A and D in ) are seen only by the most peripheral nasal
retina of each eye; the
axons of
ganglion cells in these regions (like the rest of the nasal
retina) run in the
contralateral optic tract. When the
axons in the
optic tract reach the lateral geniculate nucleus, they terminate in an orderly
map of the
contralateral hemifield (albeit in separate right and left eye layers; see
Figure 12.14).
Lateral geniculate
neurons, in turn, maintain this topographic
order in their projection to the
striate cortex (). The
fovea is represented in the
posterior part of the
striate cortex, whereas the more peripheral regions of the
retina are represented in progressively more
anterior parts of the
striate cortex. The upper
visual field is mapped below the
calcarine sulcus, and the lower
visual field above it. As in the
somatic sensory system, the amount of cortical area devoted to each unit area of the
sensory surface is not uniform, but reflects the density of
receptors and
sensory axons that supply the peripheral region. Thus, like the representation of the hand region in the
somatic sensory cortex, the representation of the
macula is disproportionately large, occupying most of the
caudal pole of the
occipital lobe.
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