How does the brain interpret what
we see?
Our vision works by the light
around us being captured by a large number of light-sensitive cells located in
the retinas at the back of our eyes. The light is converted into signals that
are sent to the brain and then converted again into visual impressions.
Nobel Prize laureates Torsten
Wiesel and David Hubel clarified how this process works during the 1960s. In
the cerebral cortex, signals are analysed in sequence by cells with the
specific tasks of interpreting contrasts, patterns, and movements. They also
showed that this ability develops in children during the initial period after
birth.
Through the discoveries of Hubel
and Wiesel, we now know that behind the origin of the visual perception in the
brain there is a considerably more complicated course of events. They were able
to demonstrate that the message about the image falling on the retina undergoes
a step-wise analysis in a system of nerve cells stored in columns. In this
system, each cell has its specific function and is responsible for a specific
detail in the pattern of the retinal image.
In 1981, Hubel and Wiesel shared
the medicine prize with Roger Sperry who made discoveries concerning
differences in the right and left hemispheres in our brain.
https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1106420521519776&set=a.642002144628285
No comments:
Post a Comment