In humans, the neural basis for colour vision lies in the activity of the 'colour-opponent' neurons, which receive inputs of opposite sign from the three different classes of cone photoreceptors that are found in the eye (Fig. 1). Colour-opponent neurons are abundant in the first stages of the visual pathway — the retina and the lateral geniculate nucleus. Surprisingly, however, they are observed rather infrequently by single-cell recordings in the next stage, the primary visual cortex (V1), where neurons that add inputs from all three cone types predominate
The largest visual area, known as the primary visual cortex or V1, has greatly contributed to the c...
In the 1950s De Valois and colleagues, followed by other researchers, discovered spectrally opposed ...
that matches the color axes defined by cone opponency (Derrington et al., 1984). Color opponent cell...
In humans, the neural basis for colour vision lies in the activity of the 'colour-opponent' neurons,...
AbstractThis is a review of the research during the past 25years on cortical processing of color sig...
It has been known since the nineteenth century that there are three types of photoreceptor for dayli...
AbstractNew results have revealed that neurons in visual area V1 are influenced by chromatic context...
SummaryPrimary visual cortex contains at least two distinct populations of color-selective cells: ne...
Colour vision — the ability to discriminate spectral differences irrespective of variations in inten...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015-12Preceding the development of modern biological tech...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020Visual information is carried from the retina by the a...
Human functional neuroimaging experiments have identified a colour area on the ventral surface of oc...
SummaryDirectly stimulating certain cortical neurons can produce a color sensation; a case is report...
We used positron emission tomography (PET) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in human...
Although it is widely held that colour and form are processed separately in early visual cortex, the...
The largest visual area, known as the primary visual cortex or V1, has greatly contributed to the c...
In the 1950s De Valois and colleagues, followed by other researchers, discovered spectrally opposed ...
that matches the color axes defined by cone opponency (Derrington et al., 1984). Color opponent cell...
In humans, the neural basis for colour vision lies in the activity of the 'colour-opponent' neurons,...
AbstractThis is a review of the research during the past 25years on cortical processing of color sig...
It has been known since the nineteenth century that there are three types of photoreceptor for dayli...
AbstractNew results have revealed that neurons in visual area V1 are influenced by chromatic context...
SummaryPrimary visual cortex contains at least two distinct populations of color-selective cells: ne...
Colour vision — the ability to discriminate spectral differences irrespective of variations in inten...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015-12Preceding the development of modern biological tech...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020Visual information is carried from the retina by the a...
Human functional neuroimaging experiments have identified a colour area on the ventral surface of oc...
SummaryDirectly stimulating certain cortical neurons can produce a color sensation; a case is report...
We used positron emission tomography (PET) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in human...
Although it is widely held that colour and form are processed separately in early visual cortex, the...
The largest visual area, known as the primary visual cortex or V1, has greatly contributed to the c...
In the 1950s De Valois and colleagues, followed by other researchers, discovered spectrally opposed ...
that matches the color axes defined by cone opponency (Derrington et al., 1984). Color opponent cell...