Author:
KAMERMANS M.,KRAAIJ D.A.,SPEKREIJSE H.
Abstract
Color vision is spectrally opponent, suggesting
that spectrally opponent neurons, such as the horizontal
cells in fish and turtle retinae, play a prominent role
in color discrimination. In the accompanying paper (Kraaij
et al., 1998), it was shown that the output signal of the
horizontal cell system to the cones is not at all spectrally
opponent. Therefore, a role for the spectrally opponent
horizontal cells in color discrimination seems unlikely.
In this paper, we propose that the horizontal cells play
a prominent role in color constancy and simultaneous color
contrast instead of in color discrimination. We have formulated
a model of the cone/horizontal cell network based on measurements
of the action spectra of the cones and of the feedback
signal of the horizontal cell system to the various cone
types. The key feature of the model is (1) that feedback
is spectrally and spatially very broad and (2) that the
gain of the cone synapse strongly depends on the feedback
strength. This makes the synaptic gain of the cones strongly
dependent on the spectral composition of the surround.
Our model, which incorporates many physiological details
of the outer retina, displays a behavior that can be interpreted
as color constancy and simultaneous color contrast. We
propose that the horizontal cell network modulates the
cone synaptic gains such that the ratios of the cone outputs
become almost invariant with the spectral composition of
the global illumination. Therefore, color constancy appears
to be coded in the retina.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
60 articles.
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