The First Steps in Seeing / Edition 1

The First Steps in Seeing / Edition 1

by R. W. Rodieck
ISBN-10:
0878937579
ISBN-13:
9780878937578
Pub. Date:
01/15/1998
Publisher:
Sinauer Associates is an imprint of Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0878937579
ISBN-13:
9780878937578
Pub. Date:
01/15/1998
Publisher:
Sinauer Associates is an imprint of Oxford University Press
The First Steps in Seeing / Edition 1

The First Steps in Seeing / Edition 1

by R. W. Rodieck

Hardcover

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Overview

The First Steps in Seeing is about the eyes, and how they capture an image and convert it to the neural messages that ultimately result in visual experience.

A full appreciation of how the eyes work is rooted in diverse areas of science—optics; biochemistry and photochemistry; molecular biology, cell biology, neurobiology, and evolutionary biology; psychology and psychophysics.

The findings related to vision from any one of these fields are not difficult to understand in themselves, but, in order to be clear and precise, each discipline has developed its own set of words and conceptual relations—in effect, its own language—and for those wanting a broad introduction to vision these separate languages can present more of an impediment to understanding than an aid. However, what lies beneath these words usually has a beautiful simplicity, and it is the aim of The First Steps in Seeing to describe how we see in a manner that is understandable to all.

In this book, the use of technical terms is restricted, and several hundred full-color illustrations ensure that the terms that are used are associated with a picture, icon, or graph that visually expresses their meaning. Experimental findings have been recast in terms of the natural world whenever possible, and broad themes bring together lines of thought that are often treated separately.

Fourteen main chapters form a "thread" that tells the main scientific story and can be read without specialized knowedge or reliance on other sources. This thread is linked to fourteen discussions which explore certain crucial topics in greater depth. Notes link the material presented in the thread and in the special topics discussions to important review articles and seminal research papers.

The First Steps in Seeing is an innovative, authoritative work that belongs in the library of anyone with an interest in visual perception.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780878937578
Publisher: Sinauer Associates is an imprint of Oxford University Press
Publication date: 01/15/1998
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 562
Product dimensions: 11.20(w) x 8.40(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Robert W. Rodieck, at the time of his death in 2003, was Bishop Professor Emeritus of Ophthalmology at the University of Washington.

Table of Contents

Prologue: The watch
Vision is a precious gift-but what is it for?

1. The chase
An encounter between a cheetah and a gazelle introduces the visual system as an integrated machine.

2. Eyes
The basic structure of our eyes is described, and compared with those of other animals.

3. Retinas
The general plan of the retina is described and the different cell classes that compose it are introduced.

INTERLUDE: SIZE
Starting with the eye, a series of magnified views steps down until the electrons thatcatch the light are reached.

4. The rain of photons onto cones
Gazing at a star is used to illustrate the formation of the retinal image and the capture of photons by the array of cones.

INTERLUDE: NEURONS
The elements of how neurons work are introduced in order to provide common ground for subsequent discussions of the functions of retinal neurons.

5. A cone pathway
The image of the star, captured by the array of cones, is conveyed to the brain.

6. The rain of photons onto rods
A pathway from rods joins the pathways for cones before leaving the retina.

7. Night and day
A photoreceptor can respond to only a limited range of light intensities, yet our photoreceptors allow us to see over an intensity range of about forty billion.

INTERLUDE: PLOTTING LIGHT INTENSITY
Graphical techniques are described that allow measures of light intensity to be converted to the rate of photon capture by single photoreceptors.

8. How photoreceptors work
The capture of a single photon by a rod provides the basis for a description of photoreceptor function.

INTERLUDE: RHODOPSINS
The primary structure of the molecules that catch the light is similar in all animals.

9. Retinal organization
The retina is layered, with different cell types disposed so as to allow their interconnections.

10. Photoreceptor attributes
Photoreceptors are specialized neurons with a variety of interesting properties.

11. Cell types
Some of the many different cell types in the retina are discussed in detail.

12. Informing the brain
Messages from each eye pass to six different regions on each side of the brain.

13. Looking
The retinal image of the external world is stabilized by a variety of factors, including messages sent by the retina to different brain centers.

14. Seeing
What we see and how we see it depends upon different types of messages that pass from the eyes to the visual cortex of the brain.

Epilogue: Ignorance
An appreciation of what we don't know about vision provides a healthy perspective on what we do know.
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