Neural Mechanisms of Color Vision von Bevil Richard Conway | Double-Opponent Cells in the Visual Cortex | ISBN 9781475759532

Neural Mechanisms of Color Vision

Double-Opponent Cells in the Visual Cortex

von Bevil Richard Conway
Buchcover Neural Mechanisms of Color Vision | Bevil Richard Conway | EAN 9781475759532 | ISBN 1-4757-5953-3 | ISBN 978-1-4757-5953-2

„... need to reiterate that this is fascinating and important work and that the introduction is an especially enjoyable, clear, useful addition to the published experimtental work. ... would recommend this as a worthy addition to your office bookshelf or your library...“
(Perception, 32 (2003)

Neural Mechanisms of Color Vision

Double-Opponent Cells in the Visual Cortex

von Bevil Richard Conway

Dr. Conway mapped the spatial and temporal structure of the cone inputs to single neurons in the primary visual cortex of the alert macaque. Color cells had receptive fields that were often Double-Opponent, an organization of spatial and chromatic opponency sufficient to form the basis for color constancy and spatial color contrast. Almost all color cells gave a bigger response to color when preceded by an opposite color, suggesting that these cells also encode temporal color contrast. In sum, color perception is likely subserved by a subset of specialized neurons in the primary visual cortex. These cells are distinct from those that likely underlie form and motion perception. Color cells establish three color axes sufficient to describe all colors; moreover these cells are capable of computing spatial and temporal color contrast - and probably contribute to color constancy computations - because the receptive fields of these cells show spatial and temporal chromatic opponency.