First-ever images of living human retinas have yielded a surprise about
how we perceive our world. Researchers at the University of Rochester
have found that the number of color-sensitive cones in the human retina
differs dramatically among people--by up to 40 times--yet people appear
to perceive colors the same way. The findings, on the cover of this
week's journal Neuroscience, strongly suggest that our perception of color is controlled much more by our brains than by our eyes.
"We were able to precisely image and count the color-receptive cones in
a living human eye for the first time, and we were astonished at the
results," says David Williams, Allyn Professor of Medical Optics and
director of the Center for Visual Science. "We've shown that color
perception goes far beyond the hardware of the eye, and that leads to a
lot of interesting questions about how and why we perceive color."
Williams and his research team, led by postdoctoral student Heidi
Hofer, now an assistant professor at the University of Houston, used a
laser-based system developed by Williams that maps out the topography
of the inner eye in exquisite detail. The technology, known as adaptive
optics, was originally used by astronomers in telescopes to compensate
for the blurring of starlight caused by the atmosphere.
Williams turned the technique from the heavens back toward the eye to
compensate for common aberrations. The technique allows researchers to
study the living retina in ways that were never before possible. The
pigment that allows each cone in the human eye to react to different
colors is very fragile and normal microscope light bleaches it away.
This means that looking at the retina from a cadaver yields almost no
information on the arrangement of their cones, and there is certainly
no ability to test for color perception. Likewise, the amino acids that
make up two of the three different-colored cones are so similar that
there are no stains that can bind to some and not others, a process
often used by researchers to differentiate cell types under a
microscope.
Imaging the living retina allowed Williams to shine light directly into
the eye to see what wavelengths each cone reflects and absorbs, and
thus to which color each is responsive. In addition, the technique
allows scientists to image more than a thousand cones at once, giving
an unprecedented look at the composition and distribution of color
cones in the eyes of living humans with varied retinal structure.
Each subject was asked to tune the color of a disk of light to produce
a pure yellow light that was neither reddish yellow nor greenish
yellow. Everyone selected nearly the same wavelength of yellow, showing
an obvious consensus over what color they perceived yellow to be. Once
Williams looked into their eyes, however, he was surprised to see that
the number of long- and middle-wavelength cones--the cones that detect
red, green, and yellow--were sometimes profusely scattered throughout
the retina, and sometimes barely evident. The discrepancy was more than
a 40:1 ratio, yet all the volunteers were apparently seeing the same
color yellow.
"Those early experiments showed that everyone we tested has the same
color experience despite this really profound difference in the
front-end of their visual system," says Hofer. "That points to some
kind of normalization or auto-calibration mechanism--some kind of
circuit in the brain that balances the colors for you no matter what
the hardware is."
In a related experiment, Williams and a postdoctoral fellow Yasuki
Yamauchi, working with other collaborators from the Medical College of
Wisconsin, gave several people colored contacts to wear for four hours
a day. While wearing the contacts, people tended to eventually feel as
if they were not wearing the contacts, just as people who wear colored
sunglasses tend to see colors "correctly" after a few minutes with the
sunglasses. The volunteers' normal color vision, however, began to
shift after several weeks of contact use. Even when not wearing the
contacts, they all began to select a pure yellow that was a different
wavelength than they had before wearing the contacts.
"Over time, we were able to shift their natural perception of yellow in
one direction, and then the other," says Williams. "This is direct
evidence for an internal, automatic calibrator of color perception.
These experiments show that color is defined by our experience in the
world, and since we all share the same world, we arrive at the same
definition of colors."
Williams' team is now looking to identify the genetic basis for this
large variation between retinas. Early tests on the original volunteers
showed no simple connection among certain genes and the number and
diversity of color cones, but Williams is continuing to search for the
responsible combination of genes.
University of Rochester Press Release
25 October 2005
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