Fall 2023 Neuroscience and Behavior BC3381 section 001

Visual Neuroscience: From the Eyeball to

VISUAL NEUROSCIENCE

Call Number 00089
Day & Time
Location
T 2:10pm-4:00pm
306 Milbank Hall (Barnard)
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required Instructor
Instructor Alex White
Type SEMINAR
Course Description

By absorbing electromagnetic radiation through their eyes, people are able to catch frisbees, recognize faces, and judge the beauty of art. For most of us, seeing feels effortless. That feeling is misleading. Seeing requires not only precise optics to focus images on the retina, but also the concerted action of millions of nerve cells in the brain. This intricate circuitry infers the likely causes of incoming patterns of light and transforms that information into feelings, thoughts, and actions. In this course we will study how light evokes electrical activity in a hierarchy of specialized neural networks that accomplish many unique aspects of seeing. Students will have the opportunity to focus their study on particular aspects, such as color, motion, object recognition, learning, attention, awareness, and how sight can be lost and recovered.  Throughout the course we will discuss principles of neural information coding (e.g., receptive field tuning, adaptation, normalization, etc.) that are relevant to other areas of neuroscience, as well as medicine, engineering, art and design.

Web Site Vergil
Department Neuroscience & Behavior @Barnard
Enrollment 8 students (12 max) as of 3:06PM Saturday, April 27, 2024
Subject Neuroscience and Behavior
Number BC3381
Section 001
Division Barnard College
Campus Barnard College
Section key 20233NSBV3381X001