Abstract

This paper relates major functions at the start and end of the color vision process. The process starts with three cone photoreceptors transducing light into electrical responses. Cone sensitivities were once expected to be Red Green Blue color matching functions (to mix colors) but microspectrometry proved otherwise: they instead peak in yellowish, greenish, and blueish hues. These physiological functions are an enigma, unmatched with any set of psychophysical (behavioral) functions. The end-result of the visual process is color sensation, whose essential percepts are unique (or pure) hues red, yellow, green, blue. Unique hues cannot be described by other hues, but can describe all other hues, e.g., that hue is reddish-blue. They are carried by four opponent chromatic response curves but the literature does not specify whether each curve represents a range of hues or only one hue (a unique) over its wavelength range. Here the latter is demonstrated, confirming that opponent chromatic responses define, and may be termed, unique hue chromatic responses. These psychophysical functions also are an enigma, unmatched with any physiological functions or basis. Here both enigmas are solved by demonstrating the three cone sensitivity curves and the three spectral chromatic response curves are almost identical sets (Pearson correlation coefficients r from 0.95–1.0) in peak wavelengths, curve shapes, math functions, and curve crossover wavelengths, though previously unrecognized due to presentation of curves in different formats, e.g., log, linear. (Red chromatic response curve is largely nonspectral and thus derives from two cones.) Close correlation combined with deterministic causation implies cones are the physiological basis of unique hues. This match of three physiological and three psychophysical functions is unique in color vision.

Highlights

  • The color vision process starts with three cone photoreceptors (Short, Medium, Long-wavelength sensitive, or SML) transducing light quanta into electrical signals

  • There is really no other reasonable candidate. These functions can be compared with physiological functions that may potentially represent the physiological basis of unique hues

  • The curve shapes of the two sets of curves shown in Fig. 6 are approximately equal, with a correlation coefficient of 0.95

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Summary

Introduction

The color vision process starts with three cone photoreceptors (Short-, Medium-, Long-wavelength sensitive, or SML) transducing light quanta into electrical signals. These lead through the retina and lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) of the thalamus to cortex and color perception, whose essential percepts are the four unique or pure hues [1], red, yellow, green, blue (rygb). No unique hue contains any part of another: for any observer there is, for example, a certain blue that is not greenish or reddish or yellowish. Orange is yellow-red, and purple is redblue, but no hue name other than red can describe unique red

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