Cerebral achromatopsia is a rare condition in which damage to the ventromedial occipital area of the cortex results in the loss of colour experience. Nevertheless, cortically colour-blind patients can still use wavelength variation to perceive form and motion. In a series of six experiments we examined whether colour could also direct exogenous attention in an achromatopsic observer. We employed the colour singleton paradigm, the phi motion effect, and the correspondence process to assess attentional modulation. Although colour singletons failed to capture attention, a motion signal, based solely on chromatic information, was able to direct attention in the patient. We then show that the effect is abolished when the chromatic contours of st...
We report the case of a patient who, after sequential bilateral strokes in the occipital regions spa...
AbstractWhile several previous psychophysical and neurophysiological studies have demonstrated chrom...
Cerebral achromatopsia. Deficits in color perception after cerebral lesions have been described for ...
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...
Cortical colour blindness is caused by brain damage to the ventro-medial occipital and temporal lobe...
Brain damage can entirely abolish color vision in cases of complete achromatopsia. Other processes t...
Patients with cerebral achromatopsia, a perceptual disorder caused by ventromedial occipital brain d...
We tested the ability of a subject with cerebral achromatopsia to discriminate between colours and t...
In two patients with total acquired cortical colour blindness and in six control subjects we studied...
It is widely held that color and motion are processed by separate parallel pathways in the visual sy...
We tested achromatopsic observer, MS, on a number of tasks to establish the extent to which he can p...
The local chromatic contrast between surfaces in a visual scene plays an important role in theories ...
AbstractBackground: Traditionally, colour information is assumed to be carried by neural channels in...
Background: Traditionally, colour information is assumed to be carried by neural channels in the par...
We report the case of a patient who, after sequential bilateral strokes in the occipital regions spa...
AbstractWhile several previous psychophysical and neurophysiological studies have demonstrated chrom...
Cerebral achromatopsia. Deficits in color perception after cerebral lesions have been described for ...
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...
Cortical colour blindness is caused by brain damage to the ventro-medial occipital and temporal lobe...
Brain damage can entirely abolish color vision in cases of complete achromatopsia. Other processes t...
Patients with cerebral achromatopsia, a perceptual disorder caused by ventromedial occipital brain d...
We tested the ability of a subject with cerebral achromatopsia to discriminate between colours and t...
In two patients with total acquired cortical colour blindness and in six control subjects we studied...
It is widely held that color and motion are processed by separate parallel pathways in the visual sy...
We tested achromatopsic observer, MS, on a number of tasks to establish the extent to which he can p...
The local chromatic contrast between surfaces in a visual scene plays an important role in theories ...
AbstractBackground: Traditionally, colour information is assumed to be carried by neural channels in...
Background: Traditionally, colour information is assumed to be carried by neural channels in the par...
We report the case of a patient who, after sequential bilateral strokes in the occipital regions spa...
AbstractWhile several previous psychophysical and neurophysiological studies have demonstrated chrom...
Cerebral achromatopsia. Deficits in color perception after cerebral lesions have been described for ...