Walsh & Hoyt: Color Constancy and Achromatopsia

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Identifier wh_ch13_p587_2
Title Walsh & Hoyt: Color Constancy and Achromatopsia
Creator Matthew Rizzo, MD, FAAN; Jason J. S. Barton, MD PhD FRCP(C)
Affiliation (MR) Department of Neurological Sciences, University of Nebraska; (JJSB) Professor, Medicine (Neurology), Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Psychology, The University of British Columbia
Subject Optic Nerve Diseases; Cerebral Achromatopsia; Prosopagnosia; Acquired Alexia; Akinetopsia; Balint's Syndrome; Positive Visual Phenomena; Visual Loss; Color Constancy; Achromatopsia
Description A defect in color constancy should result in color percepts that vary with changes in illumination. Patients with achromatopsia have a more severe deficit in that they lack any color percept at all. Testing such patients for constancy of something they do not perceive is paradoxical; however, this can be done on dyschromatopsic patients, who have some residual hue sensitivity. One such patient was reported to have impaired color constancy. Three patients, two of whom had transient symptoms of achromatopsia, and all with subtle color-matching problems at the time of testing, had abnormal shifts of color matches when lighting was changed. Despite possessing some local color constancy based upon cone contrasts, one patient had impaired constancy for complex scenes, indicating abnormal global constancy mechanisms. Another shifted his color naming to black with increasing background luminance; this indicated that his naming depended heavily on relative luminance, representing a failure of ""lightness"" (rather than hue) constancy. All of these reports included patients with some dyschromatopsia and bilateral lingual and fusiform gyral lesions, except for one unilateral case. However, a report of a large series of 27 patients found 5 subjects with impaired color constancy on matching tasks, all asymptomatic, who did not have dyschromatopsia, and who had right or left lateral parietotemporal lesions. The authors argued that this was evidence of a larger network of cortical regions beyond the lingual/fusiform region that participated in generating color constancy.
Date 2005
Language eng
Format application/pdf
Type Text
Source Walsh and Hoyt's Clinical Neuro-Ophthalmology, 6th Edition
Relation is Part of Walsh and Hoyt's Clinical Neuro-Ophthalmology Walsh and Hoyt's Clinical Neuro-Ophthalmology
Collection Neuro-Ophthalmology Virtual Education Library: Walsh and Hoyt Textbook Selections Collection: https://NOVEL.utah.edu
Publisher Wolters Kluwer Health, Philadelphia
Holding Institution Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library, University of Utah
Rights Management Copyright 2005. For further information regarding the rights to this collection, please visit: https://NOVEL.utah.edu/about/copyright
ARK ark:/87278/s6797d63
Setname ehsl_novel_whts
ID 186663
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6797d63
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