Colour Perception Flashcards

1
Q

Primate Colour Perception

A

especially well-suited for distinguishing red and yellow against a green background

  • helpful for foraging
  • detecting predators or prey, determining ripeness of fruit, richness of soil, sunset to predict weather
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2
Q

Colour Perception in Other Animals

A

can see other colours that we can’t (UV spectrum)

  • birds: signals of health in colour of feathers
  • bees: responds to specific patterns that we are unaware of for foraging (nectar maps)
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3
Q

Colour Mixing

A

few receptor types whose activity can be combined in various proportions to make every conceivable colour

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4
Q

Primary Colours

A

the three colours that can be combined in various proportions to make every colour in the spectrum
-base colour - cannot be reduced

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5
Q

Subtractive Colour Mixing

A

when coloured pigments selectively absorb some wavelengths and reflect others

  • kindergarten paint mixing
  • primary colours are red, yellow and blue
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6
Q

Complementary Colours

A

opposite respective primary colour, always makes brown when mixed

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7
Q

Additive Colour Mixing

A

when coloured lights add dominant colour to the mixture

  • used in our nervous system
  • primary colours are red, green, and blue - used together in different proportions to make all the different colours that we see
  • complementary colour mixing gets grey or white
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8
Q

Trichromatic Theory

A

proposes that the retina contains 3 different kinds of cones

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9
Q

Empirical Observations of Colour Mixing

A

you can match all of the colours of the visible spectrum by the appropriate mixing of 3 primary colours, therefore you only need three types of receptors
-human eye has three types of cones, spectrally selective photopigments maximally respond to primary colours

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10
Q

Elegance of Trichromatic Theory

A

fits with additive colour mixing

physiological evidence for 3 types of cones

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11
Q

Problems with Trichromatic Theory

A

yellow seems to be a primary colour
complementarity
after image - why is yellow the afterimage of blue?

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12
Q

Opponent Process Theory

A

each colour receptor is made up of pairs of opponent colour processes

  • each receptor is capable of being in one of 2 opponent states, but can only be in one state at a time
  • green/red and blue/yellow
  • bright/dim receptors are excited by every wavelength
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13
Q

Elegance of Opponent Process Theory

A

can explain why after image is the complementary colour

  • why mixtures of wavelengths appear white
  • fits with why we can imagine some colours and not others
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14
Q

In the Retina

A

Trichromatic Theory

  • 3 component receptors or cones that are maximally responsive to a certain wavelength
  • red, green, blue
  • response of receptors differentially affect what happens further down the line
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15
Q

Ganglion Cells and Onward

A

Opponent Process Theory

-red/green, blue/yellow, light/dark

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16
Q

Red Light (Example)

A

Stimulates red cone, excite red/green ganglion cells, signal that stimulus is red

17
Q

Yellow Light (Example)

A

equally stimulates red and green cones, red cones excites red/green ganglion cells while green cone inhibits red/green ganglion cells and excites blue/yellow ganglion cell

  • red/green signals cancel out
  • blue/yellow is excited and signals that stimulus is yellow
18
Q

Afterimage

A

is the complementary colour of the thing you just stared at

19
Q

Rate of Fire

A

signals to the brain what colour is being seen

-faster(excites) or slower(inhibits) than baseline means different colours

20
Q

Rebound Effect

A

when a receptor is excited/inhibited for a prolonged period of time, the same colour will go into the opposite state when you stare at a neutral colour

21
Q

High Resolution Channels

A

one cone to one ganglion cell

-small receptive field that, when stimulated, will cause the ganglion cell to increase or decrease its firing rate

22
Q

Low Resolution Channels

A

(away from fovea) many cones to one ganglion cell

-large receptive field that causes ganglion cell to increase or decrease firing rate

23
Q

Receptive Fields

A

Donut shaped

  • respond to colour in the centre-surround fashion
  • increases rate of firing if strikes in the middle portion (red)
  • decreases rate of firing if strikes outer ring (green)
  • response is strongest if both of the above is true, weakest if the opposite is true
24
Q

Higher Level Colour Processing

A

sent to the LGN after ganglion cells

has 6 layers

25
Q

Magnocellular

A

first two layers of LGN

-processing form, movement and depth

26
Q

Parrocellular

A

next 4 layers of LGN

-colour processing from red/green cone and finer detail

27
Q

Koniocellular

A

sublayers of LGN

-info from blue cones to primary visual cortex

28
Q

Cytochrome Oxidase (CO) Blobs

A

regions of cytochrome oxidase containing neurons that are distributed at roughly equal intervals over the primary visual cortex

  • neurons respond exclusively to colour information, show little/no response to shape, orientation or movement
  • oval in shape
  • arranged into columns that project down into layers 2 and 3 (and less so in layers 5 and 6) of the primary visual cortex
  • respond in opponent fashion
  • passed into visual association areas (analyzed further in ventral stream)
29
Q

Total Colour Blindness

A

everything is in shades of grey

-vary rare

30
Q

Protanopia

A

red/green colour blindness

  • cones filled with photopigments for green
  • no way of responding differently to green and red
  • lacking photopigments, not cones
  • can tell the difference if there is a slight difference in the way each colour absorbs light
31
Q

Deuteranopia

A

Red/green colourblindness
-cones filled with photopigments for red
no way of responding differently to green and red
-lacking photopigments, not cones
-can tell the difference if there is a slight difference in the way each colour absorbs light

32
Q

Tritanopia

A

Yellow/blue colour blindness

  • extremely rare
  • equally present in both males and females
  • blue cones are either lacking or defective
  • see reds/greens/greys