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Research Topic : visual fields
Scheme : NHMRC Project Grants
Status : Closed
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  • Researchers (0)
  • Funded Activities (94)
  • Organisations (26)
  • Funded Activity

    Vision Requirements For Reading

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $152,743.00
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    Funded Activity

    Colour And Brightness Detection In Glaucomatous Eye Disease

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $57,585.00
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    Funded Activity

    Orientation-specific Contextual Modulation In Human Visual Cortex

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $290,413.00
    Summary
    Context has a strong infuence on our visual perception. We will study patterns of activity in the normal human brain to identify the cortical signature of contextual modulation in vision. The correspondences between patterns of brain activity and visual perception in the normal human brain will provide data against which brain activity in disorders such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder can be assessed.
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    Funded Activity

    Functional Interactions Between Primate Cortical Areas In Tasks Involving Attention And Short-term Memory

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $267,280.00
    Summary
    To navigate and operate in the cluttered and dynamic sensory world around us, our brains need to be able to attend to specific objects or features in the environment, identify them and also know where they exist at any one instant of time, prior to performing the appropriate action. The attention, memory, decision and motor components involved in this process possibly involve a variety of cortical areas and neuronal operations. The special primate preparation we have developed permits us to eluc .... To navigate and operate in the cluttered and dynamic sensory world around us, our brains need to be able to attend to specific objects or features in the environment, identify them and also know where they exist at any one instant of time, prior to performing the appropriate action. The attention, memory, decision and motor components involved in this process possibly involve a variety of cortical areas and neuronal operations. The special primate preparation we have developed permits us to elucidate at a neuronal level many of these brain mechanisms. By recording neuronal activities in two different cortical areas simultaneously as the monkey performs a memory task that he has been trained on, we will test the following ideas: (1) A cortical region in the dorsal, parietal stream directs spatial attention by gating other visual areas to process only a selected region of the visual world (2) A region in the ventral, temporal stream directs attention to specific features in the visual world by gating earlier cortical areas (3) The parietal cortical areas that mediate intention for action hold the relevant information in working memory till it is forwarded to the more anterior premotor areas. These experiments have the potential to reveal the basic neuronal scheme that underpins functions such as attention, visual recognition and memory, which are impaired in many neurological disorders.
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    Funded Activity

    Functional Connectivity Between Visual Cortical Areas In The Non-human Primate

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $387,585.00
    Summary
    Visual information going from the eyes to the brain is processed in different parts of the brain to extract useful information. However, to be able to select what is important from among the vast number of objects in the scene, top-down signals from higher areas need to act on incoming signals in earlier areas. This project aims to identify what sort of neural pathways are involved in this and how it is done at the cellular level.
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    Funded Activity

    Neuronal Linking Of Attention, Perception And Action

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $586,469.00
    Summary
    We are able to perceive and interact with the environment around us primarily because a filter of attention selects just the objects or features of relevance in the world and helps to make appropriate motor responses. This project will study how attentional networks of the brain operate to link our perception and action. An understanding of this process is fundamental to revealing the underlying pathology in many neurological conditions where attention is impaired.
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    Funded Activity

    Interactions Between Afferent Channels In Vision: Basic Neurophysiology And Implications For The Pathology Of Dyslexia

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $423,662.00
    Summary
    We intend to study the interactions between different information channels in the primate visual system. The pathways from the eyes to the brain consist of different types of nerve fibres carrying distinct sorts of information. These channels have been believed to remain separate as they transmit the information through various levels of the brain. Finally, in the neocortex, it has been suggested that the visual information goes along two major streams, one dorsally to the parietal cortex and th .... We intend to study the interactions between different information channels in the primate visual system. The pathways from the eyes to the brain consist of different types of nerve fibres carrying distinct sorts of information. These channels have been believed to remain separate as they transmit the information through various levels of the brain. Finally, in the neocortex, it has been suggested that the visual information goes along two major streams, one dorsally to the parietal cortex and the other ventrally to the temporal cortex. Based upon recent studies, we question this strict segregation of the pathways and propose to study how interactions occur between the two streams and whether the two channels do come together at early levels of the visual pathway. We will also test our idea whether, of the dorsal and ventral streams, one stream might actually gate the other and decide what goes through the other stream. In fact, from our own recent studies, we have reason to believe that the way our attentional system might operate to select salient aspects of the visual scene may be through the dorsal stream selecting what goes into the ventral stream, which seems to be responsible for identifying objects. In the proposed project we will test this idea rigorously. From various lines of evidence, we also argue that the neural mechanisms that underlie this attentional spotlight is exploited by human children when they learn to read. It follows that any defect in the dorsal pathway or in the fibres and cells that feed into this will cause difficulties in reading. We believe this to be the underlying problem in dyslexic children. The project will undertake a number of experiments to test this idea.
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    Funded Activity

    A Visual Pathway Through The Limbic Cortex

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $403,121.00
    Summary
    The human brain has many subdivisions (�areas�) that are dedicated to vision, but in many cases their functions remain unclear. This project will study an area located deep in the brain, about which very little is known, and which appears to be affected from early stages in conditions such as Alzheimer�s disease. By understanding the patterns of electrical activity of cells in this region, and their connections with other brain areas, we hope to decipher their contribution to sensory cognition.
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    Funded Activity

    Functional Circuits Of The Visual Cortex

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $405,694.00
    Summary
    In the areas of the brain where visual information is processed, cells respond to the presentation of visual stimuli by changing their pattern of electrical activity. At the first level of analysis, the primary visual cortex (V1), individual cells become active only if line segments or borders of a particular orientation are present in their field of detection, which encompasses a small part of the visual scene. Cells in other visual cortical areas (the extrastriate cortex) perform more complex .... In the areas of the brain where visual information is processed, cells respond to the presentation of visual stimuli by changing their pattern of electrical activity. At the first level of analysis, the primary visual cortex (V1), individual cells become active only if line segments or borders of a particular orientation are present in their field of detection, which encompasses a small part of the visual scene. Cells in other visual cortical areas (the extrastriate cortex) perform more complex detection tasks in comparison with those in V1, which demand integration of information coming from much larger portions of the visual scene. One example of these more complex properties is the phenomenon of long-range contour integration, where our visual system groups individual line segments having similar orientations, so that they are perceived as part of the same contour. This property is reflected in the electrical responses of cells in the dorsomedial visual area (DM). How are properties such as orientation specificity and long-range contour integration created? To begin addressing this question, we will investigate correlations between the physiological properties of identified cells, the spatial distribution of their information collecting regions (dendrites), and the anatomical pathways by which they receive information from other parts of the brain. This is a basic science study aimed at determining the extent to which the anatomical structure of the brain helps define the function of individual cells and brain areas. Its primary benefit will be to increase our understanding of the mechanisms underlying all sensory processing in the brain. The knowledge obtained may also lead to developments in areas of applied research including medicine and cognitive science (for example, understanding how the brain learns to interpret visual information in early life, and how visual processing degrades with ageing).
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    Funded Activity

    Multi-focal Topographic Visual Evoked Potential: Development Of A Method For Objective Perimetry.

    Funder
    National Health and Medical Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $158,021.00
    More information

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