colour perception Flashcards
Human trichromacy
3 cone types, maximally sensitive at:
short (blue)
middle (green)
long (red) wavelengths
more long and middle than short
we have 3 cones to allow us
to distinguish between different colours
evolution:
ripe vs unripe
oxygenated vs deoxygenated blood
monochromatic primates
- nocturnal
- do not need colour
monochromats
one cone
dichromats
Protanopia - lack L cone
Deuteranopia - lack M cone
Tritanopia - Lack S cone
shifted
not as able to use the different signals between the two cones - to identify colour changes
colour vision deficiency stats
8% men - linked to sex chromosomes
less than 1% women
ageing, drugs, hormones = higher likelihood
Gene therapy cure
- inject viral DNA - injects genetic information to code for 3rd cone into the eye
- did this on squirrel monkeys - men di and women tri so potential that mechanism is present
Human techchronomy
- some women have 4 cone types
- usual 3 plus a shifted red or green cone
- tested to see if this means they can see more colours - only one women showed behavioural signs
cone opponency
the output from the three cones is combined and contrasted to give 3 cone-opponent channels
3 cone-opponent channels
L/L+M cherry teal
S/L+M violet lime
L+M achromatic or luminance axis (bright vs dark)
3 cone opponent channel connected to LGN
Parvocellular - L/L+M
Koniocellular - S/L+M
Magnocellular - luminance
colour after-effects
stare at a photo for a while and then a blank page - will see the photos opponent colours
adaption
prolonged exposure to a stimulus reduces sensitivity
colour at the cortex
v1 has blobs/patches of cells that are sensitive to colour
Colour and motion are SEPERATE
Colour info is sent along ventral processing stream along the ‘what’ pathway
Used to help identify what objects are