4.7 Article

Psychophysical Chromatic Mechanisms in Macaque Monkey

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 32, Issue 43, Pages 15216-15226

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2048-12.2012

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [0918064]
  2. Whitehall Foundation
  3. Wellesley College
  4. Radcliffe Institute
  5. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  6. Direct For Biological Sciences
  7. Division Of Integrative Organismal Systems [0918064] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Chromatic mechanisms have been studied extensively with psychophysical techniques in humans, but the number and nature of the mechanisms are still controversial. Appeals to monkey neurophysiology are often used to sort out the competing claims and to test hypotheses arising from the experiments in humans, but psychophysical chromatic mechanisms have never been assessed in monkeys. Here we address this issue by measuring color-detection thresholds in monkeys before and after chromatic adaptation, employing a standard approach used to determine chromatic mechanisms in humans. We conducted separate experiments using adaptation configured as either flickering full-field colors or heterochromatic gratings. Full-field colors would favor activity within the visual system at or before the arrival of retinal signals to V1, before the spatial transformation of color signals by the cortex. Conversely, gratings would favor activity within the cortex where neurons are often sensitive to spatial chromatic structure. Detection thresholds were selectively elevated for the colors of full-field adaptation when it modulated along either of the two cardinal chromatic axes that define cone-opponent color space [L vsM or Svs (L + M)], providing evidence for two privileged cardinal chromatic mechanisms implemented early in the visual-processing hierarchy. Adaptation with gratings produced elevated thresholds for colors of the adaptation regardless of its chromatic makeup, suggesting a cortical representation comprised of multiple higher-order mechanisms each selective for a different direction in color space. The results suggest that color is represented by two cardinal channels early in the processing hierarchy and many chromatic channels in brain regions closer to perceptual readout.

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