Form vision from melanopsin in humans.
Annette Elisabeth AllenFranck P MartialRobert J LucasPublished in: Nature communications (2019)
Detection and discrimination of spatial patterns is thought to originate with photoreception by rods and cones. Here, we investigated whether the inner-retinal photoreceptor melanopsin could represent a third origin for form vision. We developed a 4-primary visual display capable of presenting patterns differing in contrast for melanopsin vs cones, and generated spectrally distinct stimuli that were indistinguishable for cones (metamers) but presented contrast for melanopsin. Healthy observers could detect sinusoidal gratings formed by these metamers when presented in the peripheral retina at low spatial (≤0.8 cpd) and temporal (≤0.45 Hz) frequencies, and Michelson contrasts ≥14% for melanopsin. Metameric gratings became invisible at lower light levels (<1013 melanopsin photons cm-2 sr-1 s-1) when rods are more active. The addition of metameric increases in melanopsin contrast altered appearance of greyscale representations of coarse gratings and a range of everyday images. These data identify melanopsin as a new potential origin for aspects of spatial vision in humans.
Keyphrases
- magnetic resonance
- diabetic retinopathy
- optical coherence tomography
- deep learning
- contrast enhanced
- molecular dynamics
- electronic health record
- machine learning
- molecular dynamics simulations
- convolutional neural network
- optic nerve
- mass spectrometry
- artificial intelligence
- sensitive detection
- atomic force microscopy
- loop mediated isothermal amplification