Abstract
The human visual system imposes discrete perceptual categories on the continuous input space that is represented by the ratios of excitations of the cones in the retina. Is discrimination enhanced at the boundaries between perceptual hues, in theway that discrimination may be enhanced at the boundaries between speech sounds in hearing? In the chromaticity diagram, the locus of unique green separates colours that appear yellowish from those that appear bluish. Using a two-alternative spatial forced choice and an adapting field equivalent to the Daylight Illuminant D65, we measured chromatic discrimination along lines orthogonal to the locus of unique green. In experimental runs interleavedwith these performance measurements,we obtained estimates of the phenomenological boundary from the same observers. No enhancement of objectively measured discriminationwas observed at the category boundary between yellowish and bluish hues. Instead, thresholds were minimal at chromaticities where the ratio of long-wave to middle-wave cone excitation was the same as that for the background adapting field. © 2014 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved.
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Danilova, M. V., & Mollon, J. D. (2014). Is discrimination enhanced at the boundaries of perceptual categories? A negative case. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 281(1785). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2014.0367
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