Reaction time measures of adaptation to chromatic contrast

N. R A Parry, I. J. Murray, D. J. McKeefry

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Simple reaction times (RTs) were measured to brief temporally blurred (total onset 570 ms) Gaussian isoluminant chromatic patches (s.d. 0.5°) whose chromaticities lay along the cardinal chromatic axes (0°, 90°, 180°, and 270° in MBDKL color space). Bipolar adapting stimuli were employed (0° versus 180° or 90° versus 270°). These were larger Gaussian blobs (s.d. 1°), modulating sinusoidally between the two hues at 1 Hz. Throughout, the background was illuminant "C" (x = 0.31, y = 0.316, L = 12.5). In a single run, a series of 64 or 32 stimuli were presented without adaptation, followed by 64 or 32 stimuli each of which was preceded by 3 s of adaptation, either along the same or the orthogonal chromatic axis. Finally, 192 or 128 RTs were recorded to measure the time course of recovery from adaptation. Both adapting and test stimuli were presented at fixed supra-threshold contrasts. The effect of adaptation was seen as a lengthening of the RT, which occurred in the first few seconds of the adaptation period. After cessation of adaptation, there was a similarly rapid shortening of RT, although full recovery took 60-90 s. Adaptation gain functions suggested that the S-(L + M) system was less prone to adaptation than L-M. Copyright © 2008 Cambridge University Press.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)405-410
    Number of pages5
    JournalVisual Neuroscience
    Volume25
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - May 2008

    Keywords

    • Adaptation
    • Color opponency
    • Isoluminance
    • Reaction times

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