Literature DB >> 12916488

Achromatopsia, color vision, and cortex.

Charles A Heywood1, Robert W Kentridge.   

Abstract

Brain damage can entirely abolish color vision in cases of complete achromatopsia. Other processes that depend on wavelength differences, however, can be retained. Form and motion defined by pure color differences can be perceived readily even when the colors themselves cannot be told apart. The loss of color vision in cerebral achromatopsia has been equated with the loss of a "color center" presumed indispensable for the phenomenal experience of hue. The "color center" has been assigned a role in the cortical construction of color, specifically in implementing the computations that underlie color constancy. Many features of the condition are consistent with this account. Other neurologic patients, however, retain conscious experience of hue, yet fail to disentangle the illuminant and the reflectance properties of surfaces. For them, color experience is determined by the wavelength composition of light reflected from a surface. If their wavelength-dependent vision is mediated by activity in early visual areas, then it is difficult to understand why these areas are unable to perform a similar role when they remain intact in achromatopsic observers. The prevalence of cells in the ventral visual areas of the monkey brain that code color and the further fractionation of color-related areas in human observers revealed by functional imaging suggest multiple color areas. Their different contributions are only just beginning to become apparent.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12916488     DOI: 10.1016/s0733-8619(02)00102-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurol Clin        ISSN: 0733-8619            Impact factor:   3.806


  7 in total

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Authors:  Grazyna Palczewska; Frans Vinberg; Patrycjusz Stremplewski; Martin P Bircher; David Salom; Katarzyna Komar; Jianye Zhang; Michele Cascella; Maciej Wojtkowski; Vladimir J Kefalov; Krzysztof Palczewski
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2014-12-01       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  fMR-adaptation reveals separate processing regions for the perception of form and texture in the human ventral stream.

Authors:  Jonathan S Cant; Stephen R Arnott; Melvyn A Goodale
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2008-09-25       Impact factor: 1.972

3.  Orientation tuning of cytochrome oxidase patches in macaque primary visual cortex.

Authors:  John R Economides; Lawrence C Sincich; Daniel L Adams; Jonathan C Horton
Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  2011-11-06       Impact factor: 24.884

4.  Parallel, multi-stage processing of colors, faces and shapes in macaque inferior temporal cortex.

Authors:  Rosa Lafer-Sousa; Bevil R Conway
Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  2013-10-20       Impact factor: 24.884

Review 5.  Educating the blind brain: a panorama of neural bases of vision and of training programs in organic neurovisual deficits.

Authors:  Olivier A Coubard; Marika Urbanski; Clémence Bourlon; Marie Gaumet
Journal:  Front Integr Neurosci       Date:  2014-12-05

6.  Lateral and Medial Ventral Occipitotemporal Regions Interact During the Recognition of Images Revealed from Noise.

Authors:  Barbara Nordhjem; Branislava Ćurčić-Blake; Anne Marthe Meppelink; Remco J Renken; Bauke M de Jong; Klaus L Leenders; Teus van Laar; Frans W Cornelissen
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2016-01-06       Impact factor: 3.169

7.  Translucence perception is not dependent on cortical areas critical for processing colour or texture.

Authors:  A C Chadwick; C A Heywood; H E Smithson; R W Kentridge
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2017-11-15       Impact factor: 3.139

  7 in total

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