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Variant and invariant color perception in the near peripheral retina

Parry, N R A; McKeefry, D J; Murray, I J

Journal of the Optical Society of America a-Optics Image Science and Vision. 2006;23(7):1586-1597.

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Abstract

Perceived shifts in hue that occur with increasing retinal eccentricity were measured by using an asymmetric color matching paradigm for a range of chromatic stimuli. Across nine observers a consistent pattern of hue shift was found; certain hues underwent large perceived shifts in appearance with increasing eccentricity, while for others little or no perceived shift was measured. In separate color naming experiments, red, blue, and yellow unique hues were found to be correlated with those hues that exhibited little or no perceptual shift with retinal eccentricity. Unique green, however, did not exhibit such a strong correlation. Hues that exhibited the largest perceptual shifts in the peripheral retina were found to correlate with intermediate hues that were equally likely to be identified by adjacent color naming mechanisms. However, once again the correlation was found to be weakest for the green mechanism. These data raise the possibility that perceptually unique hues are linked to color signals that represent the most reliable (minimally variant) chromatic information coming from the retina. (C) 2006 Optical Society of America.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Published date:
ISSN:
Volume:
23
Issue:
7
Start page:
1586
End page:
1597
Total:
12
Pagination:
1586-1597
Digital Object Identifier:
10.1364/josaa.23.001586
ISI Accession Number:
WOS:000238626900006
Related website(s):
  • Related website <Go to ISI>://WOS:000238626900006
General notes:
  • Times Cited: 18
Access state:
Active

Institutional metadata

University researcher(s):

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:158334
Created by:
Parry, Neil
Created:
30th March, 2012, 12:10:58
Last modified by:
Parry, Neil
Last modified:
13th August, 2012, 19:01:46

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