We studied the effect of rod–cone interactions on mesopic visual reaction time (RT). Rod and cone photoreceptor excitations were independently controlled using a four-primary photostimulator. It was observed that (1) lateral rod–cone interactions increase the cone-mediated RTs; (2) the rod–cone interactions are strongest when rod sensitivity is maximal in a dark surround, but weaker with increased rod activity in a light surround; and (3) the presence of a dark surround nonselectively increased the mean and variability of chromatic (+L-M, S-cone) and luminance (L+M+S) RTs independent of the level of rod activity. The results demonstrate that lateral rod–cone interactions must be considered when deriving mesopic luminous efficiency using RT
Dark-adapted rods in the area surrounding a luminance-modulated field can suppress flicker detection...
AbstractAt mesopic light levels, an incremental change in rod activation causes changes in color app...
AbstractChromaticities of monochromatic lights from different parts of the spectrum were measured bo...
<B>This article is free to read on the publisher's website</B>\ud \ud <b>Purpose</b>\ud \ud - Photo...
Evidence has accumulated that rod activation under mesopic and scotopic light levels alters visual p...
Evidence has accumulated that rod activation under mesopic and scotopic light levels alters visual p...
Visual adaptation regulates contrast sensitivity during dynamically changing light conditions (Crawf...
This article is free to read on the publisher's website Purpose - Photoreceptor interactions reduce ...
Effect of rod–cone interactions on mesopic visual performance mediated by chromati
Dark-adapted rods suppress cone-mediated flicker detection. This study evaluates the effect that rod...
At mesopic light levels, an incremental change in rod activation causes changes in color appearance....
At mesopic light levels, an incremental change in rod activation causes changes in color appearance....
AbstractAt mesopic light levels, an incremental change in rod activation causes changes in color app...
Dark-adapted rods in the area surrounding a luminance-modulated field can suppress flicker detection...
AbstractTraditional methods for studying the effects of rod activity on color vision make it hard to...
Dark-adapted rods in the area surrounding a luminance-modulated field can suppress flicker detection...
AbstractAt mesopic light levels, an incremental change in rod activation causes changes in color app...
AbstractChromaticities of monochromatic lights from different parts of the spectrum were measured bo...
<B>This article is free to read on the publisher's website</B>\ud \ud <b>Purpose</b>\ud \ud - Photo...
Evidence has accumulated that rod activation under mesopic and scotopic light levels alters visual p...
Evidence has accumulated that rod activation under mesopic and scotopic light levels alters visual p...
Visual adaptation regulates contrast sensitivity during dynamically changing light conditions (Crawf...
This article is free to read on the publisher's website Purpose - Photoreceptor interactions reduce ...
Effect of rod–cone interactions on mesopic visual performance mediated by chromati
Dark-adapted rods suppress cone-mediated flicker detection. This study evaluates the effect that rod...
At mesopic light levels, an incremental change in rod activation causes changes in color appearance....
At mesopic light levels, an incremental change in rod activation causes changes in color appearance....
AbstractAt mesopic light levels, an incremental change in rod activation causes changes in color app...
Dark-adapted rods in the area surrounding a luminance-modulated field can suppress flicker detection...
AbstractTraditional methods for studying the effects of rod activity on color vision make it hard to...
Dark-adapted rods in the area surrounding a luminance-modulated field can suppress flicker detection...
AbstractAt mesopic light levels, an incremental change in rod activation causes changes in color app...
AbstractChromaticities of monochromatic lights from different parts of the spectrum were measured bo...