Circadian and Visual Neuroscience

Circadian and Visual Neuroscience

Circadian and Visual Neuroscience

Circadian and Visual Neuroscience

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Overview

Circadian and Visual Neuroscience, Volume 273 in the Methods in Enzymology series, highlights new advances in the field with this new volume presenting interesting chapters on topics including Optical set-ups, Psychophysics of Luminance and Color Vision, Psychophysics of non-visual photoreception PRC/IRC/DRC/Spectral Sensitivity, Circadian and visual photometry, Modelling (retina), Modelling (circadian), Techniques for examining vision at the cellular level, Advanced techniques for characterizing the world hyperspectrally, Circadian physiology in mice: Melanopsin, Circadian physiology in mice: Color and cones, Translational aspects of animal studies, Retinal clocks, Primate non-visual physiology, Light and mood in animal models, and much more.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780323859455
Publisher: Elsevier Science
Publication date: 07/25/2022
Series: Progress in Brain Research , #273
Pages: 378
Product dimensions: 7.50(w) x 9.25(h) x (d)

About the Author

Dr Nayantara Santhi is currently a Vice-Chancellor's Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Psychology at Northumbria University. After completing her PhD at Northeastern University on human visual perception, she joined the Division of Sleep Medicine at Harvard Medical School to work on mechanisms underlying the non-visual effects of light and its impact on physiology and cognition. Following this she joined the Surrey Sleep Research Centre, where she focused on characterising individual differences in the circadian regulation in cognition. Dr Santhi is active in a range of international organisations, including the Sleep Research Society and European Sleep Research Society.

Dr Manuel Spitschan is a University Research Lecturer in the Department of Experimental Psychology at the University of Oxford. After undergraduate studies in psychology at the University of St Andrews in Scotland, he completed his PhD at the University of Pennsylvania on melanopsin signals in the human visual system. He then joined the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University to work on temporal integration in human circadian photoreception. In 2017, he joined the University of Oxford on a prestigious Sir Henry Wellcome Fellowship. In January 2022, he will move to the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics in Tübingen to set up a new research group on sensory and circadian neuroscience. Dr Manuel is active in various international organisations, including the Optical Society, the International Commission on Illumination (CIE) and the Daylight Academy.

Table of Contents

1. Optical set-ups 2. Psychophysics of Luminance and Color Vision 3. Psychophysics of non-visual photoreception PRC/IRC/DRC/Spectral Sensitivity 4. Circadian and visual photometry 5. Modelling (retina) 6. Modelling (circadian) 7. Techniques for examing vision at the cellular level 8. Advanced techniques for characterising the world hyperspectrally 9. Circadian physiology in mice: Melanopsin 10. Circadian physiology in mice: Colour and cones 11. Translational aspects of animal studies 12. Retinal clocks 13. Primate non-visual physiology 14. Light and mood in animal models 15. Metameric approaches to characterising non-visual photoreception 16. Ageing of visual mechanisms 17. Ageing of non-visual mechanisms 18. Field Studies 19. Light and Shift Work/Jet-lag 20. Light regime for healthy older adults 21. Light-Dark Cycle, Sleep and Circadian Rhythms in non-industrial populations 22. Daylight Variation

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