Search results for "Color perception"

showing 10 items of 71 documents

Swimming-style synesthesia.

2010

The traditional and predominant understanding of synesthesia is that a sensory input in one modality (inducer) elicits sensory experiences in another modality (concurrent). Recent evidence suggests an important role of semantic representations of inducers. We report here the cases of two synesthetes, experienced swimmers, for whom each swimming style evokes another synesthetic color. Importantly, synesthesia is evoked also in the absence of direct sensory stimulation, i.e., the proprioceptive inputs during swimming. To evoke synesthetic colors, it is sufficient to evoke the concept of a given swimming style e.g., by showing a photograph of a swimming person. A color-consistency test and a S…

Malegenetic structuresPhotic StimulationCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySensory systemNeuropsychological TestsStyle (sociolinguistics)Perceptual DisordersYoung AdultmedicineHumansSynesthesiaModality (semiotics)SwimmingSensory stimulation therapyProprioceptionmedicine.diseaseNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPattern Recognition VisualFemalePsychologyColor PerceptionPhotic StimulationStroop effectCognitive psychologyCortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
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Do mental processes share a domain-general resource?

2010

What determines success and failure in dual-task situations? Many theories propose that the extent to which two activities can be performed concurrently depends on the nature of the information involved in the activities. In particular, verbal and visuospatial activities are thought to be fueled by distinct resources, so that interference occurs between two verbal activities or two visuospatial activities, but little or no interference occurs between verbal and visuospatial activities. The current study examined trade-offs in four dual-task situations in which participants maintained verbal or visuospatial information while concurrently processing either verbal or visuospatial information.…

MaleRecallWorking memoryA domainShort-term memoryRetention PsychologyVerbal LearningVisuospatial abilityDevelopmental psychologyJudgmentYoung AdultResource (project management)Mental Processesddc:150Pattern Recognition VisualOrientationHumansAttentionFemalePsychologyGeneral PsychologyCognitive loadColor PerceptionCognitive psychologyPsychological science
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Photoreceptors, lightness constancy and color vision.

1986

LightnessColor constancyLightbusiness.industryColor visionColour VisionGeneral MedicineCone (formal languages)FluorescenceOpticsHumansPhotoreceptor CellsScotopic visionbusinessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsColor PerceptionLightingMathematicsDie Naturwissenschaften
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Visual acuity and color discrimination in patients with cataracts.

2020

Color vision tests can give information about pathological changes in eye structures. The purpose of our research was to study the color vision sensitivity and visual acuity changes before and after cataract surgery. We used a saturated Farnsworth D15 color vision arrangement test to check color sensitivity changes in confusion line directions. The test is easily perceptible (essential to eldery patients), and it is possible to check color sensitivity changes in tritan, protan, and deutan confusion line directions. The results were analyzed in several ways: by summing the color differences between adjacent caps according to Bowman and averaging the color difference vectors according to Ving…

MaleVisual acuitygenetic structuresColor visionmedicine.medical_treatmentVisual Acuity01 natural sciencesColor discriminationCataract010309 opticsOpticsCataracts0103 physical sciencesmedicineHumansIn patientChromatic scaleLeast-Squares AnalysisMathematicsAgedColor differencebusiness.industryCataract surgerymedicine.diseaseeye diseasesAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsOptometryRegression AnalysisFemalesense organsComputer Vision and Pattern Recognitionmedicine.symptombusinessColor PerceptionJournal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics, image science, and vision
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The bilateral field advantage effect in memory precision.

2018

Previous research has demonstrated that visual working memory performance is better when visual items are allocated in both left and right visual fields than within only one hemifield. This phenomenon is called the bilateral field advantage (BFA). The BFA is thought to be driven by an enhanced probability of storage, rather than by greater precision. In the present experiments, we sought to test whether the BFA can also extend to precision when the parameters of the task are modified. Using a moderate number of to-be-remembered items and 400 ms presentation time, we found better precision in the bilateral condition than in the unilateral condition. The classic BFA was still found in the for…

MalePhysiologybilateral field advantageSpeech recognitionField (computer science)Functional LateralityTask (project management)0302 clinical medicineAttentionGeneral Psychologyta51505 social sciencesmemory (cognition)General MedicinenäköhavainnotNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyMemory Short-TermFemaleCuesPsychologyärsykkeetColor PerceptionUniversitiesExperimental and Cognitive Psychologynäkömuisti050105 experimental psychologyworking memoryvisual working memory03 medical and health sciencesPhysiology (medical)Humans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesModerate numberStudentsmuisti (kognitio)ta113CommunicationAnalysis of Variancebusiness.industryWorking memoryAssociation Learningkapasiteettityömuistimemory precisionMental RecallVisual Fieldsbusinessvisual memory030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPhotic StimulationQuarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006)
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Influence of the luminance level on visual performance with a disposable soft cosmetic tinted contact lens.

2001

The purpose of the present work was to study the effect on visual performance of wearing disposable soft tinted contact lenses for cosmetic purposes. Parameters such as contrast sensitivity (Vistech 6000), colour vision (Farnsworth-Munsell 100-Hue colour test), visual fields (static Goldmann perimetry) and subjective vision (what the wearer feels while wearing the lenses) were studied under different illumination levels in order to check for possible vision losses while wearing these contact lenses at low illumination levels. Sixteen emmetropic subjects were fitted consecutively with seven pairs of different colour lenses (Optima Colors lenses by BauschLomb), and the experimental parameters…

AdultGoldmann perimetryAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectColour VisionEmmetropiaColorContact Lenses HydrophilicLuminanceSensory SystemsContact lensContrast SensitivityOphthalmologyContrast (vision)OptometryHumansVisual Field TestsVisual FieldsColor PerceptionLightingVision OcularOptometryMathematicsmedia_commonOphthalmicphysiological optics : the journal of the British College of Ophthalmic Opticians (Optometrists)
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Does optimal partitioning of color space account for universal color categorization?

2017

A 2007 study by Regier, Kay, and Khetarpal purports to show that universal categories emerge as a result of optimal partitioning of color space. Regier, Kay, and Khetarpal only consider color categorizations of up to six categories. However, in most industrialized societies eleven color categories are observed. This paper shows that when applied to the case of eleven categories, Regier, Kay, and Khetarpal's optimality criterion yields unsatisfactory results. Applications of the criterion to the intermediate cases of seven, eight, nine, and ten color categories are also briefly considered and are shown to yield mixed results. We consider a number of possible explanations of the failure of th…

OptimizationOptimality criterionColor visionmedia_common.quotation_subjectCulturelcsh:MedicineSocial SciencesColorColor space050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSociologyPhoneticsPerceptionStatisticsEthnicitiesPsychologyHumans0501 psychology and cognitive scienceslcsh:ScienceVowelsLexiconsmedia_commonMathematicsMultidisciplinarylcsh:R05 social sciencesCognitive PsychologyBiology and Life SciencesLinguisticsCategorizationPhysical SciencesPeople and PlacesLanguagesCognitive Sciencelcsh:QPopulation GroupingsPerceptionNavajo PeopleNatural LanguageMathematicsColor Perception030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNatural languageResearch ArticleNeurosciencePLOS ONE
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New intraocular lens for achromatizing the human eye.

2007

To describe the design of a new intraocular lens (IOL) capable of correcting spherical and chromatic aberrations when implanted in the human eye.University of Murcia, Murcia, and University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain.A hybrid singlet achromatic IOL was designed. The IOL has a combination of a refractive and a diffractive surface, with 1 of the surfaces being aspherical. Optical simulations were used to model the polychromatic modulation transfer function (MTF) in pseudophakic eyes to explain the differences in optical quality afforded by the achromatic IOL. Parameters such as focus shift, optical path difference, through-focus, and robustness to tilt and decentering of achromatic IOLs wer…

medicine.medical_treatmentIntraocular lensEyeProsthesis DesignModels Biologicallaw.inventionOpticslawChromatic aberrationmedicineHumansDioptrePhysicsLenses Intraocularbusiness.industryModels TheoreticalCentrationSensory SystemsOptical qualityOphthalmologymedicine.anatomical_structureTilt (optics)Achromatic lensOptometrySurgeryHuman eyebusinessColor PerceptionJournal of cataract and refractive surgery
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Influence of stimulus color on the control of reaching-grasping movements.

2001

This kinematic study aimed to determine whether color is a stimulus property involved in the control of reaching-grasping movements. Subjects reached and grasped a target-object, located either on the right or on the left of the subject's midline. A distractor, placed along the subject's midline, could be randomly presented. The colors, i.e., both chromaticity (red and green stimuli were presented) and lightness, of the target and distractor were varied in experiment 1. Only stimulus lightness and only stimulus chromaticity were varied in experiments 2 and 3, respectively. In experiment 4 subjects matched with their thumb and index finger the size of the target-stimuli presented in experime…

AdultMaleHuman kinematicsProperty (programming)MovementKinematicsStimulus (physiology)Neuropsychological TestsTarget colorOpticsOrientationmedicineReaction TimeHumansComputer visionChromaticity and lightnessChromaticityHand Strengthbusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceGRASPMotor controlReaching-graspingBody movementIndex fingerBiomechanical Phenomenamedicine.anatomical_structurePattern Recognition VisualSpace PerceptionArmFemaleArtificial intelligencebusinessPsychologyInterferenceReaching-grasping · Human kinematics · Target color · Chromaticity and lightness · InterferenceColor PerceptionPhotic StimulationPsychomotor PerformanceExperimental brain research
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Separate processing of “color” and “brightness” in goldfish

1991

Spectral sensitivity was measured under different adaptation levels using a behavioral training technique in which the fish had to discriminate between a dark test field and a test field illuminated with monochromatic light. Depending on which of the two test fields was used as training test field, two functions were obtained which differ (1) in absolute sensitivity and (2) in shape. When trained on the dark test field, the fish seems to discriminate on the basis of a "color" cue, but it uses a "brightness" cue when trained on the illuminated test field. This was concluded from measurements of wavelength discrimination. Under low levels of the adaptation light (1.5 and 0.2 lx instead of 20 …

Retinal Ganglion CellsBrightnessLightgenetic structuresField (physics)Color visionDark AdaptationAdaptation (eye)OpticsGoldfishPsychophysicsPsychophysicsAnimalsPhotoreceptor CellsVisual Pathwaysbusiness.industrySensory SystemsElectrophysiologyOphthalmologySpectral sensitivitySensory Thresholdssense organsMonochromatic colorPsychologybusinessSensitivity (electronics)Color PerceptionVision Research
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