S&P
102
Instructor:
Dr. Ione Fine
858-822-0606
fine@salk.edu
office hours: Tuesday 12-1, Thursday 12-1
CHIP annex, RM 3570
TAs:
Edward Hubbard
edhubbard@psy.ucsd.edu
office hours: Tues 1-2, Wednesday 11-12
B-517 (Basement McGill Annex).
Lindsay Shenk
lshenk@ucsd.edu
Office hours: Monday 9:30-10:30
B-545 (Basement McGill Annex)
FINAL
GRADES
Grades listed in numberical order by the last 5 digits of
the ID
To calculate your final score we took:
1) The best of your two scores (in percentage) on Midterm
1 and Final 1.
2) The best of your two scores (in percentage) on Midterm
2 and Final 2.
3) Your percentage for the paper.
4) Your score on the final.
Each score was weighted equally (25% of your grade)
Final grades were curved according to the following curve:
90.00 and above A+
83.00-89.99 A
80.00-82.99 A-
77.00-79.99 B+
73.00-76.99 B
70.00-72.99 B-
67.00-69.99 C+
63.00-66.99 C
60.00-62.99 C-
57.00-59.99 D+
50.00-57.99 D
Less than 50.00 F
Where is the annex
McGill building has a figure-8 configuration, one part of the figure 8 (the part without elevators) is the annex.
To get to the 3rd floor of the annex. Go to the main
McGill building. Go up the elevators to the third floor. On the wall outside
the elevator will be an small sign pointing towards the annex.
To get to the annex basement. Find the entrance to McGill that is closest to the big parking lots. Go
down to the basement through that entrance. If you use any other entrance you may run into locked doors since some of the basement is sealed to
undergraduates.
Which Scantron
Do I Need?
Class Notes
Organization/syllabus
lecture
1(4/1/2003)
lecture
2
(4/3/2003)
lecture 3 (4/8/2003)
lecture
4a &
lecture
4b (4/10/2003 - print both!)
lecture 5 (4/15/2003)
lecture 6 (4/17/2003)
lecture 7 (4/21/2003)
lecture
8 (4/29/2003)
lecture
9 (4/31/2003)
lecture
10 (5/06/2003)
lecture
11 (5/13/2003)
lecture
12 (5/15/2003)
lecture 13
(5/22/2003)
lecture
14 (5/27/2003)
lecture 15 (5/29/2003)
lecture
16 (6/03/2003)
lecture
17 (6/05/2003) + Q&A!!! (have Qs ready!)
***************************************************************************************************************************
Class Paper
The class paper is worth 25% of the final grade. Read
one of the original research papers below and summarize it in
no more than 1000 words.
paper to be handed in, May 29th (in class)
(1) Ernst, M. O. and M. S. Banks
(2000). “Touch can change visual slant perception.” Nature Neuroscience
3(1): 69-73. Paper link
The visual
system uses several signals to deduce the three-dimensional structure
of the environment, including binocular disparity, texture gradients,
shading and motion parallax. Although each of these sources of information
is independently insufficient to yield reliable three-dimensional
structure from everyday scenes, the visual system combines them
by weighting the available information; altering the weights would
therefore change the perceived structure. We report that haptic feedback
(active touch) increases the weight of a consistent surface-slant
signal relative to inconsistent signals. Thus, appearance of a subsequently
viewed surface is changed: the surface appears slanted in the direction
specified by the haptically reinforced signal.
(2) Gandhi, S. P., D. J.
Heeger, et al. (1999). “Spatial attention affects brain activity
in human primary visual cortex.” Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96(6): 3314-9.
Paper link
Functional
MRI was used to test whether instructing subjects to attend to
one or another location in a visual scene would affect neural activity
in human primary visual cortex. Stimuli were moving gratings restricted
to a pair of peripheral, circular apertures, positioned to the right
and to the left of a central fixation point. Subjects were trained
to perform a motion discrimination task, attending (without moving their
eyes) at any moment to one of the two stimulus apertures. Functional
MRI responses were recorded while subjects were cued to alternate their
attention between the two apertures. Primary visual cortex responses
in each hemisphere modulated with the alternation of the cue; responses
were greater when the subject attended to the stimuli in the contralateral
hemifield. The attentional modulation of the brain activity was about
25% of that evoked by alternating the stimulus with a uniform field.
(3) Kanwisher, N., J. McDermott,
et al. (1997). “The fusiform face area: a module in human extrastriate
cortex specialized for face perception.” J Neurosci 17(11): 4302-11.Paper link
Using
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we found an area
in the fusiform gyrus in 12 of the 15 subjects tested that was
significantly more active when the subjects viewed faces than when
they viewed assorted common objects. This face activation was used to
define a specific region of interest individually for each subject,
within which several new tests of face specificity were run. In each
of five subjects tested, the predefined candidate "face area" also
responded significantly more strongly to passive viewing of (1) intact
than scrambled two-tone faces, (2) full front-view face photos than
front- view photos of houses, and (in a different set of five subjects)
(3) three-quarter-view face photos (with hair concealed) than photos
of human hands; it also responded more strongly during (4) a consecutive
matching task performed on three-quarter-view faces versus hands.
Our technique of running multiple tests applied to the same region defined
functionally within individual subjects provides a solution to two
common problems in functional imaging: (1) the requirement to correct
for multiple statistical comparisons and (2) the inevitable ambiguity
in the interpretation of any study in which only two or three conditions
are compared. Our data allow us to reject alternative accounts of the
function of the fusiform face area (area "FF") that appeal to visual
attention, subordinate-level classification, or general processing of any
animate or human forms, demonstrating that this region is selectively
involved in the perception of faces.
(4) Roorda, A., A. B. Metha,
et al. (2001). “Packing arrangement of the three cone classes
in primate retina.” Vis Research 41(10-11): 1291-306. Paper link
We describe
a detailed analysis of the spatial arrangement of L, M and S
cones in the living eyes of two humans and one monkey. We analyze
the cone mosaics near 1 degrees eccentricity using statistical methods
that characterize the arrangement of each type of cone in the mosaic
of photoreceptors. In all eyes, the M and L cones are arranged randomly.
This gives rise to patches containing cones of a single type. In human,
but not in monkey, the arrangement of S-cones cannot be distinguished
from random.
(5) Shadlen, M. N.
and W. T. Newsome (1996). “Motion perception: Seeing and deciding.”
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 93: 628-633. Paper link
The primate
visual system offers unprecedented opportunities for investigating
the neural basis of cognition. Even the simplest visual discrimination
task requires processing of sensory signals, formation of a decision,
and orchestration of a motor response. With our extensive knowledge
of the primate visual and oculomotor systems as a base, it is now
possible to investigate the neural basis of simple visual decisions
that link sensation to action. Here we describe an initial study of
neural responses in the lateral intraparietal area (LIP) of the cerebral
cortex while alert monkeys discriminated the direction of motion in
a visual display. A subset of LIP neurons carried high-level signals
that may comprise a neural correlate of the decision process in our task.
These signals are neither sensory nor motor in the strictest sense; rather
they appear to ref lect integration of sensory signals toward a decision
appropriate for guiding movement. If this ultimately proves to be the case,
several fascinating issues in cognitive neuroscience will be brought under
rigorous physiological scrutiny.
(6) Watanabe, T., J. E. Nanez,
et al. (2001). “Perceptual learning without perception.” Nature
413(6858): 844-8. Paper link
The brain
is able to adapt rapidly and continually to the surrounding environment,
becoming increasingly sensitive to important and frequently encountered
stimuli. It is often claimed that this adaptive learning is highly
task-specific, that is, we become more sensitive to the critical
signals in the tasks we attend to. Here, we show a new type of perceptual
learning, which occurs without attention, without awareness and
without any task relevance. Subjects were repeatedly presented with
a background motion signal so weak that its direction was not visible;
the invisible motion was an irrelevant background to the central task
that engaged the subject's attention. Despite being below the threshold
of visibility and being irrelevant to the central task, the repetitive
exposure improved performance specifically for the direction of the
exposed motion when tested in a subsequent suprathreshold test. These
results suggest that a frequently presented feature sensitizes the visual
system merely owing to its frequency, not its relevance or salience.