Electrophysiological evidence for higher-level chromatic mechanisms in humans.

J Vis

Abteilung Allgemeine Psychologie and Center for Mind, Brain & Behavior, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen, Gießen, Germany.

Published: August 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Color vision in humans is facilitated by three types of cones in the retina that create three main color channels: luminance, red-green, and yellow-blue.
  • The study used EEGs to explore higher-order chromatic mechanisms by examining how colored targets embedded in noise evoke visual responses, measuring the impact of noise on these responses.
  • Results showed that masking was strongest when target and noise colors matched direction, indicating the presence of multiple chromatic mechanisms beyond the basic cardinal ones in the early visual cortex.

Article Abstract

Color vision in humans starts with three types of cones (short [S], medium [M], and long [L] wavelengths) in the retina and three retinal and subcortical cardinal mechanisms, which linearly combine cone signals into the luminance channel (L + M), the red-green channel (L - M), and the yellow-blue channel (S-(L + M)). Chromatic mechanisms at the cortical level, however, are less well characterized. The present study investigated such higher-order chromatic mechanisms by recording electroencephalograms (EEGs) on human observers in a noise masking paradigm. Observers viewed colored stimuli that consisted of a target embedded in noise. Color directions of the target and noise varied independently and systematically in an isoluminant plane of color space. The target was flickering on-off at 3 Hz, eliciting steady-state visual evoked potential (SSVEP) responses. As a result, the masking strength could be estimated from the SSVEP amplitude in the presence of 6 Hz noise. Masking was strongest (i.e. target eliciting smallest SSVEPs) when the target and noise were along the same color direction, and was weakest (i.e. target eliciting highest SSVEPs) when the target and noise were along orthogonal directions. This pattern of results was observed both when the target color varied along the cardinal and intermediate directions, which is evidence for higher-order chromatic mechanisms tuned to intermediate axes. The SSVEP result can be well predicted by a model with multiple broadly tuned chromatic mechanisms. In contrast, a model with only cardinal mechanisms failed to account for the data. These results provide strong electrophysiological evidence for multiple chromatic mechanisms in the early visual cortex of humans.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8354086PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/jov.21.8.12DOI Listing

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