Blue-Yellow Signals Are Enhanced by Spatiotemporal Luminance Contrast in Macaque V1
- 1 April 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 93 (4) , 2263-2278
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00743.2004
Abstract
We measured the color tuning of a population of S-cone-driven V1 neurons in awake, fixating monkeys. Analysis of randomly chosen color stimuli that were effective in evoking action potentials showed that these neurons received opposite sign input from the S cones and a combination of L and M cones. Surprisingly, these cells also responded to LM cone contrast irrespective of polarity, a nonlinear sensitivity that was masked by conventional linear analysis methods. Taken together, these observations can be summarized in a nonlinear model that combines nonopponent and opponent signals such that luminance contrast enhances color processing. These findings indicate that important aspects of the cortical representation of color cannot be described by classical linear analysis, and reveal a possible neural correlate of perceptual color-luminance interactions.Keywords
This publication has 54 references indexed in Scilit:
- Spike-triggered characterization of excitatory and suppressive stimulus dimensions in monkey V1Neurocomputing, 2004
- Cone Inputs in Macaque Primary Visual CortexJournal of Neurophysiology, 2004
- The Impact of Suppressive Surrounds on Chromatic Properties of Cortical NeuronsJournal of Neuroscience, 2004
- Convergence properties of three spike-triggered analysis techniquesNetwork: Computation in Neural Systems, 2003
- Biases in white noise analysis due to non-Poisson spike generationNeurocomputing, 2003
- Normalization of cell responses in cat striate cortexVisual Neuroscience, 1992
- Motion selectivity and the contrast-response function of simple cells in the visual cortexVisual Neuroscience, 1991
- Real-time performance of a movement-sensitive neuron in the blowfly visual system: coding and information transfer in short spike sequencesProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1988
- Contrast dependence and mechanisms of masking interactions among chromatic and luminance gratingsJournal of the Optical Society of America A, 1988
- Influence of luminance contrast on hue discriminationJournal of the Optical Society of America, 1974