Author:
VANLEEUWEN M.T.,JOSELEVITCH C.,FAHRENFORT I.,KAMERMANS M.
Abstract
Color constancy is one of the most impressive features of color vision
systems. Although the phenomenon has been studied for decades, its
underlying neuronal mechanism remains unresolved. Literature indicates an
early, possibly retinal mechanism and a late, possibly cortical mechanism.
The early mechanism seems to involve chromatic spatial integration and
performs the critical calculations for color constancy. The late mechanism
seems to make the color manifest. We briefly review the current evidence
for each mechanism. We discuss in more detail a model for the early
mechanism that is based on direct measurements of goldfish outer retinal
processing and induces color constancy and color contrast. In this study
we extrapolate this model to primate retina, illustrating that it is
highly likely that a similar mechanism is also present in primates. The
logical consequence of our experimental work in goldfish and our model is
that the wiring of the cone/horizontal cell system sets the reference
point for color vision (i.e., it sets the white point for that
animal).
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
24 articles.
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