4.3 Article

Task-dependent contrast gain in anomalous trichromats

Journal

VISION RESEARCH
Volume 184, Issue -, Pages 14-22

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.visres.2021.02.003

Keywords

Vision; Color vision; Anomalous trichromacy; Contrast; Psychophysics; Adaptation

Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [P20 GM103650]
  2. National Institute of Health [EY-10834]

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Anomalous trichromacy results in a different sensitivity to colors, but experimental evidence suggests the presence of compensation in certain tasks. Anomalous observers show significant differences in contrast matching and reaction times compared to normal controls in various visual tasks, but their performance can be adjusted to match controls by scaling contrast.
Anomalous trichromacy is a form of color vision deficiency characterized by the presence of three cone types, but with shifted spectral sensitivities for L or M cones, causing a red-green color deficiency. However, long-term adaptation to this impoverished opponent input may allow for a more normal color experience at the suprathreshold level (compensation). Recent experimental evidence points to the presence of compensation in some tasks. The current study used threshold detection, suprathreshold contrast matching, and a reaction-time task to compare contrast coding in normal and anomalous observers along the cardinal cone-opponent axes. Compared to color normals, anomals required more L-M contrast, but not S contrast, to detect stimuli and to match an achromatic reference stimulus. Reaction times were measured for several contrast levels along the two coneopponent axes. Anomals had higher overall reaction times, but their reaction-time versus contrast functions could be matched to those of controls simply by scaling contrast by the detection thresholds. Anomalous participants were impaired relative to controls for L-M stimuli in all three tasks. However, the contrast losses were three times greater for thresholds and reaction times than for suprathreshold matches. These data provide evidence for compensation in anomalous trichromats, but highlight the role that the experimental task plays in revealing it.

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