Color Vision
- PMID: 21413395
- Bookshelf ID: NBK11537
Color Vision
Excerpt
Color vision is an illusion created by the interactions of billions of neurons in our brain. There is no color in the external world; it is created by neural programs and projected onto the outer world we see. It is intimately linked to the perception of form where color facilitates detecting borders of objects (Fig. 1).
Color is created by utilizing two properties of light, energy and frequency of vibration or wavelength. How our brain separates these two properties of light, energy and wavelength, and then recombines them into color perception is a mystery that has intrigued scientists through the ages. We know much about the nature of light and the subjective impressions of color, definable by physical standards (1) but ultimately color should be explained at the level of single cells in our brain. Examination of the responses of single neurons or arrays of such neurons provides the best insights into the physiology of color vision. Ultimately our understanding of this process will allow us to model the neural circuits that underlie the perception of color and form. Although still beyond reach, progress is being made in deciphering these clever circuits that create our perception of the external world.
We start by describing the nature of the photoreceptors that convert light energy into neural signals. Then we consider the parallel channels leading from the retina to the thalamus carrying information into visual cortex, where color is ultimately determined. Lastly we use our current understanding to speculate on how visual cortex uses neural circuits to create the perception of color and form.
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Sections
- Introduction
- The Photoreceptors
- Chromatic and Achromatic Contrast
- Horizontal Cells
- Bipolar and Ganglion Cells
- Divariant Blue/Yellow Color Vision
- Color Constancy and Double Opponency
- Trivariant Color Vision
- The Cone Mosaic of Trivariant Color Vision
- A Parallel System of Achromatic Ganglion Cells
- The Lateral Geniculate Nucleus (LGN)
- Striate Cortex
- Pure Spectral Contrast
- Simple, Complex and Hypercomplex Double Opponent Cells
- The Stabilized Retinal Image
- Color Vision Beyond Striate Cortex
- Redness at short wavelengths
- Hering's Theory of Color Vision
- The Future
- About the Author
- References
References
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- Wright WD. Researches on Normal and Defective Colour Vision. London: Henry Kimpton; 1946.
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- Maxwell JC. On colour vision. Proc R Inst. Great Britain. 1872; 6:260-271.
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- Ekesten B, Gouras P. Cone and rod inputs to murine retinal ganglion cells: Evidence of cone opsin specific channels. Vis Neurosci. 2005;22:893–903. - PubMed
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