| Literature DB >> 23446689 |
Charles A Hass1, Gregory D Horwitz.
Abstract
To elucidate the cortical mechanisms of color vision, we recorded from individual primary visual cortex (V1) neurons in macaque monkeys performing a chromatic detection task. Roughly 30% of the neurons that we encountered were unresponsive at the monkeys' psychophysical detection threshold (PT). The other 70% were responsive at threshold but on average, were slightly less sensitive than the monkey. For these neurons, the relationship between neurometric threshold (NT) and PT was consistent across the four isoluminant color directions tested. A corollary of this result is that NTs were roughly four times lower for stimuli that modulated the long- and middle-wavelength sensitive cones out of phase. Nearly one-half of the neurons that responded to chromatic stimuli at the monkeys' detection threshold also responded to high-contrast luminance modulations, suggesting a role for neurons that are jointly tuned to color and luminance in chromatic detection. Analysis of neuronal contrast-response functions and signal-to-noise ratios yielded no evidence for a special set of "cardinal color directions," for which V1 neurons are particularly sensitive. We conclude that at detection threshold--as shown previously with high-contrast stimuli-V1 neurons are tuned for a diverse set of color directions and do not segregate naturally into red-green and blue-yellow categories.Entities:
Keywords: color vision; detection psychophysics; electrophysiology; visual cortex
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23446689 PMCID: PMC3653042 DOI: 10.1152/jn.00671.2012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurophysiol ISSN: 0022-3077 Impact factor: 2.714