AbstractBackground: Traditionally, colour information is assumed to be carried by neural channels in the parvocellular pathway and to be encoded in an opponent manner, while other, non-parvocellular, spectrally non-opponent channels are thought to play no part in colour vision. But is the parvocellular pathway the only way that colours can be discriminated in human vision? We studied two patients with cerebral achromatopsia, who lack conscious colour perception but are nevertheless able to make use of colour information. In particular, we investigated whether, in these patients, colour discrimination is mediated by the parvocellular pathway.Results The achromatopsic patients carried out a forced-choice colour- and luminance-discrimination ...
In a seminal work, Ungerleider and Mishkin (1982) offered substantial evidence that two separate vis...
The color of an object, when part of a complex scene, is determined not only by its spectral reflect...
Colour and greyscale (black and white) pictures look different to us, but it is not clear whether th...
Background: Traditionally, colour information is assumed to be carried by neural channels in the par...
AbstractBackground: Traditionally, colour information is assumed to be carried by neural channels in...
We tested the ability of a subject with cerebral achromatopsia to discriminate between colours and t...
Cerebral achromatopsia is a rare condition in which damage to the ventromedial occipital area of the...
Cerebral achromatopsia is a rare condition in which damage to the ventromedial occipital area of the...
Patients with cerebral achromatopsia, resulting from damage to ventromedial occipital cortex, cannot...
Patients with cerebral achromatopsia, a perceptual disorder caused by ventromedial occipital brain d...
Cortical colour blindness is caused by brain damage to the ventro-medial occipital and temporal lobe...
AbstractStudies of patients who are colour blind as a result of brain damage show that colour contri...
It is widely held that color and motion are processed by separate parallel pathways in the visual sy...
In two patients with total acquired cortical colour blindness and in six control subjects we studied...
Human colour vision is subserved by three photoreceptor, or cone, types. To optimise the coding of n...
In a seminal work, Ungerleider and Mishkin (1982) offered substantial evidence that two separate vis...
The color of an object, when part of a complex scene, is determined not only by its spectral reflect...
Colour and greyscale (black and white) pictures look different to us, but it is not clear whether th...
Background: Traditionally, colour information is assumed to be carried by neural channels in the par...
AbstractBackground: Traditionally, colour information is assumed to be carried by neural channels in...
We tested the ability of a subject with cerebral achromatopsia to discriminate between colours and t...
Cerebral achromatopsia is a rare condition in which damage to the ventromedial occipital area of the...
Cerebral achromatopsia is a rare condition in which damage to the ventromedial occipital area of the...
Patients with cerebral achromatopsia, resulting from damage to ventromedial occipital cortex, cannot...
Patients with cerebral achromatopsia, a perceptual disorder caused by ventromedial occipital brain d...
Cortical colour blindness is caused by brain damage to the ventro-medial occipital and temporal lobe...
AbstractStudies of patients who are colour blind as a result of brain damage show that colour contri...
It is widely held that color and motion are processed by separate parallel pathways in the visual sy...
In two patients with total acquired cortical colour blindness and in six control subjects we studied...
Human colour vision is subserved by three photoreceptor, or cone, types. To optimise the coding of n...
In a seminal work, Ungerleider and Mishkin (1982) offered substantial evidence that two separate vis...
The color of an object, when part of a complex scene, is determined not only by its spectral reflect...
Colour and greyscale (black and white) pictures look different to us, but it is not clear whether th...