Abstract

Many studies have examined how color and luminance information are processed in the visual system. It has been observed that chromatic noise masked luminance discrimination in trichromats and that luminance thresholds increased as a function of noise saturation. Here, we aimed to compare chromatic noise inhibition on the luminance thresholds of trichromats and subjects with severe deutan or protan losses. Twenty-two age-matched subjects were evaluated, 12 trichromats and 10 with congenital color vision impairment: 5 protanopes/protanomalous, and 5 deuteranopes/deuteranomalous. We used a mosaic of circles containing chromatic noise consisting of 8 chromaticities around protan, deutan, and tritan confusion lines. A subset of the circles differed in the remaining circles by the luminance arising from a C-shaped central target. All the participants were tested in 4 chromatic noise saturation conditions (0.04, 0.02, 0.01, 0.005 u′v′ units) and 1 condition without chromatic noise. We observed that trichromats had an increasing luminance threshold as a function of chromatic noise saturation under all chromatic noise conditions. The subjects with color vision deficiencies displayed no changes in the luminance threshold across the different chromatic noise saturations when the noise was composed of chromaticities close to their color confusion lines (protan and deutan chromatic noise). However, for tritan chromatic noise, they were found to have similar results to the trichromats. The use of chromatic noise masking on luminance threshold estimates could help to simultaneously examine the processing of luminance and color information. A comparison between luminance contrast discrimination obtained from no chromatic and high-saturated chromatic noise conditions could be initially undertaken in this double-duty test.

Highlights

  • Many studies have examined how color and luminance information are processed in the visual system

  • The luminance contrast thresholds of trichromats and subjects with severe protan or deutan losses were compared under each chromatic noise condition

  • For all subjects with color vision impairments, color vision genotyping was verified by phenotype evaluation using the color discrimination test

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Summary

Introduction

Many studies have examined how color and luminance information are processed in the visual system. The subjects with color vision deficiencies displayed no changes in the luminance threshold across the different chromatic noise saturations when the noise was composed of chromaticities close to their color confusion lines (protan and deutan chromatic noise). A chromatic noise was applied to a mosaic stimulus that had a target contrasting luminance in the background They found that the luminance contrast threshold changed as a function of the saturation of the chromatic noise. The higher the chromatic noise saturation, the higher the luminance contrast threshold This method was only applied in normal trichromats. It is unclear how the luminance contrast thresholds of subjects with congenital color vision deficiency would be affected. The luminance contrast thresholds of trichromats and subjects with severe protan or deutan losses were compared under each chromatic noise condition

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