CHROMATIC AND LUMINANCE SIGNALS IN VISUAL MEMORY

被引:33
|
作者
SACHTLER, WL
ZAIDI, Q
机构
[1] Department of Psychology, Columbia University, New York, NY
关键词
D O I
10.1364/JOSAA.9.000877
中图分类号
O43 [光学];
学科分类号
070207 ; 0803 ;
摘要
The efficiency of chromatic and luminance signals was studied in a set of tasks requiring the discrimination of two colors. Discrimination was measured around an adapting achromatic light and a number of other points in a three-dimensional color space. As a baseline, discrimination thresholds were measured under conditions permitting a side-by-side comparison of stimuli in space or time. For the spatiotemporal configurations used in these experiments, chromatic signals were more efficient than luminance signals in terms of the difference in cone excitation required at the discrimination threshold. When stimuli were separated in both space and time, so that memory was required for their comparison, the efficiency of luminance signals was attenuated further, while chromatic signals retained their efficiency. Further experiments showed that the addition of a memory requirement did not impair the accuracy of luminance discrimination when the two test colors could be placed in distinct perceptual categories with respect to the surround color. Our results indicate that chromatic signals are particularly efficient in simple color discrimination tasks requiring even the barest amount of memory, especially when the perceptual categorization scheme is not available for the comparison of stimuli.
引用
收藏
页码:877 / 894
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The effects of luminance and chromatic background flicker on the human visual evoked potential
    Brigell, M
    Strafella, A
    Parmeggiani, L
    Demarco, PJ
    Celesia, GG
    VISUAL NEUROSCIENCE, 1996, 13 (02) : 265 - 275
  • [32] Mixing of Chromatic and Luminance Retinal Signals in Primate Area V1
    Li, Xiaobing
    Chen, Yao
    Lashgari, Reza
    Bereshpolova, Yulia
    Swadlow, Harvey A.
    Lee, Barry B.
    Alonso, Jose Manuel
    CEREBRAL CORTEX, 2015, 25 (07) : 1920 - 1937
  • [33] VISUAL EVOKED-POTENTIALS TO LUMINANCE AND CHROMATIC CONTRAST IN RHESUS-MONKEYS
    PREVIC, FH
    VISION RESEARCH, 1986, 26 (12) : 1897 - 1907
  • [34] TEMPORAL PROPERTIES OF VISUAL CORTICAL-NEURONS PROCESSING CHROMATIC AND LUMINANCE CONTRAST
    KULIKOWSKI, JJ
    PERCEPTION, 1991, 20 (01) : 94 - 94
  • [35] Specializations for chromatic and temporal signals in human visual cortex
    Liu, JJ
    Wandell, BA
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2005, 25 (13): : 3459 - 3468
  • [36] The effects of luminance contribution from large fields to chromatic visual evoked potentials
    Skiba, Rafal M.
    Duncan, Chad S.
    Crognale, Michael A.
    VISION RESEARCH, 2014, 95 : 68 - 74
  • [37] Early cortical interactions between chromatic and luminance signals: an ERP study of object classification
    Martinovic, J.
    Jennings, B.
    PERCEPTION, 2013, 42 : 108 - 108
  • [38] Luminance and chromatic signals interact differently with melanopsin activation to control the pupil light response
    Barrionuevo, Pablo A.
    Cao, Dingcai
    JOURNAL OF VISION, 2016, 16 (11):
  • [39] MOTION OF CHROMATIC AND LUMINANCE BEATS
    GROPPER, S
    DERRINGTON, A
    INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 1991, 32 (04) : 829 - 829
  • [40] Electrocortical amplification for emotionally arousing natural scenes: The contribution of luminance and chromatic visual channels
    Miskovic, Vladimir
    Martinovic, Jasna
    Wieser, Matthias J.
    Petro, Nathan M.
    Bradley, Margaret M.
    Keil, Andreas
    BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2015, 106 : 11 - 17