WordNet
- optical properties; "the optics of a telescope"
- the branch of physics that studies the physical properties of light
- an intersection or crossing of two tracts in the form of the letter X (同)chiasm, decussation
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出典(authority):フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』「2014/01/13 14:04:39」(JST)
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Brain: Optic chiasm |
Brain viewed from below; the front of the brain is above. Visual pathway with optic chiasm (X shape) is shown in red (1543 image from Andreas Vesalius' Fabrica)
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Optic nerves, chiasm, and optic tracts
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Latin |
chiasma opticum |
Gray's |
subject #197 883 |
MeSH |
Optic+chiasm |
NeuroLex ID |
birnlex_1416 |
The optic chiasm or optic chiasma (Greek χίασμα, "crossing", from the Greek χιάζω 'to mark with an X', after the Greek letter 'Χ', chi) is the part of the brain where the optic nerves (CN II) partially cross. The optic chiasm is located at the bottom of the brain immediately below the hypothalamus.[1]
Contents
- 1 Pathways
- 2 Optic chiasm in cats
- 3 Additional images
- 4 See also
- 5 References
- 6 External links
Pathways[edit]
The images on the nasal sides of each retina cross over to the opposite side of the brain via the optic nerve at the optic chiasm (decussation of medial fibers). The temporal images, on the other hand, stay on the same side. This allows the images from either side of the field from both eyes to be transmitted to the appropriate side of the brain, combining the sides together. This allows for parts of both eyes that attend to the right visual field to be processed in the left visual system in the brain, and vice versa. This is linked to skin sensation, which also reaches the opposite side of the body, after reaching the diencephalon (rear forebrain). This decussation (crossing) is an adaptive feature of frontally oriented eyes, rendering binocular vision to animals with this adaptive feature. (Some animals, with laterally positioned eyes, have little binocular vision, so there is a more complete crossover of visual signals.)
Beyond the optic chiasm, with crossed and uncrossed fibers, the optic nerves become optic tracts. The signals are passed on to the lateral geniculate body, in turn giving them to the occipital cortex (the outer matter of the rear brain).[2]
Optic chiasm in cats[edit]
In Siamese cats with certain genotypes of the albino gene, this wiring is disrupted, with less of the nerve-crossing than is normal, as a number of scholars have reported.[3] To compensate for lack of crossing in their brains, they cross their eyes (strabismus).[4]
This is also seen in albino tigers, as Guillery & Kaas report.[5]
Additional images[edit]
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Mesal aspect of a brain sectioned in the median sagittal plane.
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Median sagittal section of brain.
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Scheme showing central connections of the optic nerves and optic tracts.
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Coronal section of brain through anterior commissure.
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The fornix and corpus callosum from below.
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Diagram showing the positions of the three principal subarachnoid cisternæ.
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The hypophysis cerebri in position. Shown in sagittal section.
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Median sagittal through the hypophysis of an adult monkey. Semidiagrammatic.
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3D schematic representation of optic tracts
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Human brainstem anterior view
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Cerebrum. Deep dissection. Inferior dissection.
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Cerebrum.Inferior view.Deep dissection
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Spinal cord. Brachial plexus. Cerebrum.Inferior view.Deep dissection.
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Cerebral peduncle, optic chasm, cerebral aqueduct. Inferior view. Deep dissection.
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Cerebral peduncle, optic chasm, cerebral aqueduct. Inferior view. Deep dissection.
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Cerebrum.Inferior view.Deep dissection.
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Cerebrum.Inferior view.Deep dissection.
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Cerebrum. Optic and olfactory nerves.Inferior view. Deep dissection.
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Cerebrum.Inferior view. Deep dissection.
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Cerebrum. Inferior view.Deep dissection
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ Colman, Andrew M. (2006). Oxford Dictionary of Psychology (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 530. ISBN 0-19-861035-1
- ^ "eye, human." Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica 2006 Ultimate Reference Suite DVD 2009
- ^ OMIA "Coat colour, albinism. Phenotype in cat (Felis catus).". OMIA. Retrieved 2009-09-26.
- ^ Guillery RW, Kaas JH (June 1973). "Genetic abnormality of the visual pathways in a "white" tiger". Science 180 (4092): 1287–9. doi:10.1126/science.180.4092.1287. PMID 4707916.
- ^ Guillery RW (May 1974). "Visual pathways in albinos". Sci. Am. 230 (5): 44–54. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0574-44. PMID 4822986.
- Jeffery G (October 2001). "Architecture of the optic chiasm and the mechanisms that sculpt its development". Physiol. Rev. 81 (4): 1393–414. PMID 11581492.
External links[edit]
- Roche Lexicon - illustrated navigator, at Elsevier 13048.000-1
Sensory system: Visual system and eye movement pathways
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Visual perception |
1° (Bipolar cell of Retina) → 2° (Ganglionic cell) → 3° (Optic nerve → Optic chiasm → Optic tract → LGN of Thalamus) → 4° (Optic radiation → Cuneus and Lingual gyrus of Visual cortex → Blobs → Globs)
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Muscles of orbit |
Tracking
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Smooth pursuit: Parietal lobe · Occipital lobe
Saccade: Frontal eye fields
Nystagmus → Fixation reflex → PPRF
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Horizontal gaze
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PPRF → Abducens nucleus → MLF → Oculomotor nucleus → Medial rectus muscle
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Vertical gaze
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Rostral interstitial nucleus → Oculomotor nucleus, Trochlear nucleus → Muscles of orbit
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Vestibulo-ocular reflex
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Semicircular canal → Vestibulocochlear nerve → Vestibular nuclei → Abducens nucleus → MLF (Vestibulo-oculomotor fibers) → Oculomotor nucleus → Medial rectus muscle
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Pupillary reflex |
Pupillary dilation
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1° (Posterior hypothalamus → Ciliospinal center) → 2° (Superior cervical ganglion) → 3° (Sympathetic root of ciliary ganglion → Nasociliary nerve → Long ciliary nerves → Iris dilator muscle)
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Pupillary light reflex
(constriction)
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1° (Retina → Optic nerve → Optic chiasm → Optic tract → Pretectal nucleus) → 2° (Edinger-Westphal nucleus) → 3° (Oculomotor nerve → Parasympathetic root of ciliary ganglion → Ciliary ganglion) → (4° Short ciliary nerves → Iris sphincter muscle)
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Accommodation
vergence
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1° (Retina → Optic nerve → Optic chiasm → Optic tract → Visual cortex → Brodmann area 19 → Pretectal area) → 2° (Edinger-Westphal nucleus) → 3° (Short ciliary nerves → Ciliary ganglion → Ciliary muscle)
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Circadian rhythm |
Retina → Hypothalamus (Suprachiasmatic nucleus)
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anat (g/a/p)/phys/devp/prot
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proc, drug (S1A/1E/1F/1L)
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Nerves of head and neck: the cranial nerves and nuclei (TA A14.2.01, GA 9.855)
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terminal (SN->0) |
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olfactory (AON->I) |
- olfactory bulb
- olfactory tract
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optic (LGN->II) |
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oculomotor
(ON, EWN->III) |
- superior branch
- parasympathetic root of ciliary ganglion/ciliary ganglion
- inferior branch
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trochlear (TN->IV) |
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trigeminal
(PSN, TSN, MN, TMN->V) |
- trigeminal ganglion
- ophthalmic
- maxillary
- mandibular
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abducens (AN->VI) |
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facial (FMN, SN, SSN->VII) |
near origin |
- nervus intermedius
- geniculate
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inside
facial canal |
- greater petrosal
- nerve to the stapedius
- chorda tympani
- lingual nerve
- submandibular ganglion
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at stylomastoid
foramen |
- posterior auricular
- suprahyoid
- parotid plexus
- temporal
- zygomatic
- buccal
- mandibular
- cervical
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vestibulocochlear
(VN, CN->VIII) |
- cochlear
- striae medullares
- lateral lemniscus
- vestibular
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glossopharyngeal
(NA, ISN, SN->IX) |
before jugular fossa |
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after jugular fossa |
- tympanic
- tympanic plexus
- lesser petrosal
- otic ganglion
- stylopharyngeal branch
- pharyngeal branches
- tonsillar branches
- lingual branches
- carotid sinus
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vagus
(NA, DNVN, SN->X) |
before jugular fossa |
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after jugular fossa |
- meningeal branch
- auricular branch
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neck |
- pharyngeal branch
- superior laryngeal
- recurrent laryngeal (inferior)
- superior cervical cardiac
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thorax |
- inferior cardiac
- pulmonary
- vagal trunks
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abdomen |
- celiac
- renal
- hepatic
- anterior gastric
- posterior gastric
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accessory (NA, SAN->XI) |
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hypoglossal (HN->XII) |
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anat (h/r/t/c/b/l/s/a)/phys (r)/devp/prot/nttr/nttm/ntrp
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noco/auto/cong/tumr, sysi/epon, injr
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UpToDate Contents
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English Journal
- Chondromyxoid fibroma in the sella turcica region.
- Xu H, Qin Z, Shi Z.SourceDepartment of Neurosurgery, Huashan Hospital, 12 Wulumuqi Zhong Road, Fudan University, and Shanghai Neurosurgical Center, Shanghai 200040, China.
- Journal of clinical neuroscience : official journal of the Neurosurgical Society of Australasia.J Clin Neurosci.2011 Oct;18(10):1419-21. Epub 2011 Jul 20.
- Chondromyxoid fibroma (CMF) is an uncommon tumor that primarily develops in the long bones of young males. It is rarely seen in the skull and involvement of the skull base is rare. We report a patient with CMF arising in the region of the sella turcica. A literature review regarding the clinical and
- PMID 21778057
Japanese Journal
- Laboratory investigation: Comparing retinal reflectance changes elicited by transcorneal electrical retinal stimulation with those of optic chiasma stimulation in cats
- Mihashi Toshifumi,Okawa Yoshitaka,Miyoshi Tomomitsu [他]
- Japanese journal of ophthalmology 55(1), 49-56, 2011-01
- NAID 40017664442
Related Links
- The optic chiasm or optic chiasma is the part of the brain where the optic nerves ( CN II) partially cross. The optic chiasm is located at the bottom of the brain immediately below the hypothalamus. Contents. 1 Pathways; 2 Optic chiasm in cats ...
Related Pictures
★リンクテーブル★
[★]
- 英
- optic chiasm、optic chiasma
- 関
- 視交差、視交叉、視神経交叉
[★]
- 関
- choice、choose、elect、elective、option、optional、prefer、select、selection、selective
[★]
- 関
- ocular、vision、visual
[★]
- 関
- optical
[★]
交叉、視交叉
- 関
- chiasmal、optic chiasm