Abstract

In 1819, Johann Purkinje described how a moving light source that displaces the shadow of the retinal blood vessels to adjacent cones can produce the entopic percept of a branching tree. Here, we describe a novel method for producing a similar percept. We used a device that mixes 56 narrowband primaries under computer control, in conjunction with the method of silent substitution, to present observers with a spectral modulation that selectively targeted penumbral cones in the shadow of the retinal blood vessels. Such a modulation elicits a clear Purkinje-tree percept. We show that the percept is specific to penumbral L and M cone stimulation and is not produced by selective penumbral S cone stimulation. The Purkinje-tree percept was strongest at 16 Hz and fell off at lower (8 Hz) and higher (32 Hz) temporal frequencies. Selective stimulation of open-field cones that are not in shadow, with penumbral cones silenced, also produced the percept, but it was not seen when penumbral and open-field cones were modulated together. This indicates the need for spatial contrast between penumbral and open-field cones to create the Purkinje-tree percept. Our observation provides a new means for studying the response of retinally stabilized images and demonstrates that penumbral cones can support spatial vision. Further, the result illustrates a way in which silent substitution techniques can fail to be silent. We show that inadvertent penumbral cone stimulation can accompany melanopsin-directed modulations that are designed only to silence open-field cones. This in turn can result in visual responses that might be mistaken as melanopsin-driven.

Highlights

  • A fine network of retinal vessels supplies the inner retina with blood [1,2,3], with decreasing vessel diameter towards the fovea

  • We demonstrate a novel method for visualizing the Purkinje tree, one that does not involve stimulus motion

  • We report that selective stimulation of the penumbral L and M, but not S cones, elicits a clear percept of the retinal blood vessels

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Summary

Introduction

A fine network of retinal vessels supplies the inner retina with blood [1,2,3], with decreasing vessel diameter towards the fovea. In 1819, the Bohemian physiologist Johann Evangelist Purkinje (Czech spelling Jan Evangelista Purkyně) found that moving a candle across the visual field allows an observer to view their own retinal blood vessels. This method displaces the shadow of the blood vessels on the retina, breaking stabilization and producing the entopic percept that we refer to as the Purkinje tree ([6,7]; see Fig 2A). The cones that lie within the shadow of blood vessels have an altered spectral sensitivity relative to their open-field counterparts. We report that selective stimulation of the penumbral L and M, but not S cones, elicits a clear percept of the retinal blood vessels

Results
29 HW 2200
Discussion

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