Color-Vision Mechanisms in the Peripheral Retinas of Normal and Dichromatic Observers
Open Access
- 1 February 1973
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 61 (2), 125-145
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.61.2.125
Abstract
It is possible that so-called normal trichromatic vision occurs only between the central blue-blind fixation area and about 30° peripherally. Beyond about 30° vision has been alleged to become dichromatic (red-green blind), and beyond about 60°, monochromatic. Hence every form of color blindness may characterize various zones of the normal retina. We have studied mechanisms of peripheral color vision, mainly by measuring the spectral sensitivities of the blue-, green-, and red-sensitive systems, isolated by differential color adaptation. In normal observers the sensitivity of the blue-mechanism falls off about 2 log units by 80° out. The green- and red-sensitive systems decline only about 0.7 log unit over the same range. Protanopes, deuteranopes, and tritanopes exhibit comparable changes. We have not found any color mechanism present centrally to be wholly lost peripherally. Nor, for dichromats, have we found any mechanism missing centrally to be present peripherally. Whatever evidences of peripheral color blindness have been observed appear to involve other mechanisms than failure of receptors, probably including some fusion of neural pathways from receptors to centers.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Blue-Blindness in the Normal Fovea*Journal of the Optical Society of America, 1967
- Defective color vision and its inheritance.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1966
- Hue-Wavelength Relation Measured by Color-Naming Method for Three Retinal LocationsScience, 1964
- The Receptors of Human Color VisionScience, 1964
- Accumulation of Calcium and Strontium by Brown Trout from Waters in the United KingdomNature, 1963
- Color Defect and Color TheoryScience, 1958
- Congenital Achromatopsia: A Report of 19 Cases*Journal of the Optical Society of America, 1954
- Spectral sensitivity and wave‐length discrimination of the peripheral retinaThe Journal of Physiology, 1953
- THE INTERPRETATION OF SPECTRAL SENSITIVITY CURVESBritish Medical Bulletin, 1953
- Human Vision and the SpectrumScience, 1945