Vision Sciences Laboratory, Department of Psychology, The University of Georgia Athens, GA, USA.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2013 Jul 3;7:331. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00331. eCollection 2013.
Due to their unique contribution to human vision, the short (S)-wavelength sensitive cones, their anatomical projections and, more recently, the cortical representation of their function, have motivated intense scientific interest. The principal study of the visual channel associated with S-cone projections has been conducted using psychophysical, neurophysiological, and ex vivo anatomical techniques, whereas more recent research on the pathway has employed functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The purpose of this manuscript is to present a perspective regarding the means by which color signals within this visual channel are processed in the brain, namely how differences in short-wavelength light transmission caused by intraocular, pre-receptoral filtration are compensated for. Recent results from fMRI and psychophysical studies indicate the existence of a frequency-dependent signal amplification mechanism, whereby lower frequencies result in an amplification of S-cone signals. This finding could motivate a future research direction for determining the localization of blue-yellow color processing and neural compensation in the blue-yellow visual channel.
由于短波长敏感视锥细胞(S 视锥细胞)对人类视觉具有独特的贡献,以及它们的解剖学投射,还有它们功能的皮质代表,这些都激发了强烈的科学兴趣。与 S 视锥细胞投射相关的视觉通道的主要研究是使用心理物理学、神经生理学和离体解剖学技术进行的,而最近对该通路的研究则采用了功能磁共振成像(fMRI)。本文的目的是提出一种观点,即探讨在大脑中如何处理该视觉通道内的颜色信号,具体来说,就是如何补偿由眼内、受体前过滤引起的短波长光传输差异。来自 fMRI 和心理物理学研究的最新结果表明存在一种频率依赖的信号放大机制,即较低的频率会导致 S 视锥信号的放大。这一发现可能会促使未来的研究方向确定蓝黄视觉通道中蓝黄颜色处理和神经补偿的定位。