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1.
J Vis ; 15(2)2015 Feb 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25761328

ABSTRACT

The unique hues--blue, green, yellow, red--form the fundamental dimensions of opponent-color theories, are considered universal across languages, and provide useful mental representations for structuring color percepts. However, there is no neural evidence for them from neurophysiology or low-level psychophysics. Tapping a higher prelinguistic perceptual level, we tested whether unique hues are particularly salient in search tasks. We found no advantage for unique hues over their nonunique complementary colors. However, yellowish targets were detected faster, more accurately, and with fewer saccades than their complementary bluish targets (including unique blue), while reddish-greenish pairs were not significantly different in salience. Similarly, local field potentials in primate V1 exhibited larger amplitudes and shorter latencies for yellowish versus bluish stimuli, whereas this effect was weaker for reddish versus greenish stimuli. Consequently, color salience is affected more by early neural response asymmetries than by any possible mental or neural representation of unique hues.


Subject(s)
Color Perception/physiology , Retinal Cone Photoreceptor Cells/physiology , Animals , Contrast Sensitivity/physiology , Humans , Macaca mulatta , Psychophysics , Saccades/physiology
2.
Nat Neurosci ; 18(1): 97-103, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25420070

ABSTRACT

Images are processed in the primary visual cortex by neurons that encode different stimulus orientations and spatial phases. In primates and carnivores, neighboring cortical neurons share similar orientation preferences, but spatial phases were thought to be randomly distributed. We discovered a columnar organization for spatial phase in cats that shares similarities with the columnar organization for orientation. For both orientation and phase, the mean difference across vertically aligned neurons was less than one-fourth of a cycle. Cortical neurons showed threefold more diversity in phase than orientation preference; however, the average phase of local neuronal populations was similar through the depth of layer 4. We conclude that columnar organization for visual space is not only defined by the spatial location of the stimulus, but also by absolute phase. Taken together with previous findings, our results suggest that this phase-visuotopy is responsible for the emergence of orientation maps.


Subject(s)
Visual Cortex/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Animals , Cats , Male , Orientation/physiology , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Photic Stimulation , Visual Fields/physiology , Visual Pathways/physiology
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(8): 3170-5, 2014 Feb 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24516130

ABSTRACT

Astronomers and physicists noticed centuries ago that visual spatial resolution is higher for dark than light stimuli, but the neuronal mechanisms for this perceptual asymmetry remain unknown. Here we demonstrate that the asymmetry is caused by a neuronal nonlinearity in the early visual pathway. We show that neurons driven by darks (OFF neurons) increase their responses roughly linearly with luminance decrements, independent of the background luminance. However, neurons driven by lights (ON neurons) saturate their responses with small increases in luminance and need bright backgrounds to approach the linearity of OFF neurons. We show that, as a consequence of this difference in linearity, receptive fields are larger in ON than OFF thalamic neurons, and cortical neurons are more strongly driven by darks than lights at low spatial frequencies. This ON/OFF asymmetry in linearity could be demonstrated in the visual cortex of cats, monkeys, and humans and in the cat visual thalamus. Furthermore, in the cat visual thalamus, we show that the neuronal nonlinearity is present at the ON receptive field center of ON-center neurons and ON receptive field surround of OFF-center neurons, suggesting an origin at the level of the photoreceptor. These results demonstrate a fundamental difference in visual processing between ON and OFF channels and reveal a competitive advantage for OFF neurons over ON neurons at low spatial frequencies, which could be important during cortical development when retinal images are blurred by immature optics in infant eyes.


Subject(s)
Dark Adaptation/physiology , Models, Neurological , Photoreceptor Cells, Vertebrate/physiology , Thalamus/physiology , Visual Cortex/physiology , Visual Pathways/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Animals , Cats , Darkness , Evoked Potentials, Visual/physiology , Humans , Light , Photic Stimulation
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