colour perception Flashcards

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1
Q

Human trichromacy

A

3 cone types, maximally sensitive at:
short (blue)
middle (green)
long (red) wavelengths

more long and middle than short

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2
Q

we have 3 cones to allow us

A

to distinguish between different colours

evolution:
ripe vs unripe
oxygenated vs deoxygenated blood

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3
Q

monochromatic primates

A
  • nocturnal
  • do not need colour
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4
Q

monochromats

A

one cone

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5
Q

dichromats

A

Protanopia - lack L cone

Deuteranopia - lack M cone

Tritanopia - Lack S cone

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6
Q

shifted

A

not as able to use the different signals between the two cones - to identify colour changes

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7
Q

colour vision deficiency stats

A

8% men - linked to sex chromosomes
less than 1% women

ageing, drugs, hormones = higher likelihood

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8
Q

Gene therapy cure

A
  • 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
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9
Q

Human techchronomy

A
  • 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
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10
Q

cone opponency

A

the output from the three cones is combined and contrasted to give 3 cone-opponent channels

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11
Q

3 cone-opponent channels

A

L/L+M cherry teal
S/L+M violet lime
L+M achromatic or luminance axis (bright vs dark)

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12
Q

3 cone opponent channel connected to LGN

A

Parvocellular - L/L+M
Koniocellular - S/L+M
Magnocellular - luminance

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13
Q

colour after-effects

A

stare at a photo for a while and then a blank page - will see the photos opponent colours

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14
Q

adaption

A

prolonged exposure to a stimulus reduces sensitivity

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15
Q

colour at the cortex

A

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

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16
Q

cerebral achromatopsia

A

damage to small cortical region can cause loss of colour perception

this is evidence for the cortex generating colour

if you only have damage to one then may only lose it in one half visual field

17
Q

memory colour

A

objects have a typical colour

banana = yellow

if we edit banana to look grey - ps overshoot by adding blue because the brain expects the banana to be yellow so when we get to grey the brain adds a bit

blue = yellow opponent colour so it balances it

18
Q

aesthetic response to colour

A

ecological valence theory

19
Q

ecological valence theory

A

colour preference is due to colour-object association

e.g. if we like water we like blue more

20
Q

preference for colour combinations
natural scenes

A

people prefer yellow-blue and orange-blue

may be due to the fact these are the colours found in natural scenes which we are often exposed to

21
Q

colour constancy

A

brain is able to keep the colour of objects the same
e.g. if you brought a banana from a bright room to outside - still yellow

if a surface is grey under yellow light - surface must actually be blue - opponent colours

22
Q

Anomalous trichromats

A

Deuteranomaly (M shifted toward L)

Protanomaly ( L shifted to M)

23
Q

biological combinations theory

A

you can account for colour preference by weighting how much you care about the different cone opponent processes