Spatial luminance contrast sensitivity and color discrimination measured with transient visual evoked potential

Authors

  • Bruno Duarte Gomes Universidade Federal da Pará
  • Givago da Silva Souza Universidade Federal da Pará
  • Anderson Raiol Rodrigues Universidade Federal da Pará
  • Cézar Akiyoshi Saito Universidade Federal da Pará
  • Manoel da Silva Filho Universidade Federal da Pará
  • Luiz Carlos de Lima Silveira Universidade Federal da Pará

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S0103-65642006000400004

Keywords:

Color discrimination, Contraste sensitivity, Visual evoked potentials, Vision estimulation

Abstract

The Visual Evoked Potential (VEP) is a cortical response obtainable on the scalp. It usually reflects the activity from V1 neurons. It is classified in transient or steady-state, according with the temporal frequency of stimulation. Other stimuli properties evoke a selective activity from different neuronal groups found in V1. This way, VEP have been used to study luminance and chromatic human vision. Several studies used VEP to estimate luminance contrast sensitivity in the spatial frequency domain. More recently, some studies used VEP to measure color discrimination thresholds. The transient VEP shows a good agreement with psychophysical measurements of spatial luminance contrast sensitivity and color discrimination, being a noninvasive method to study vision from subjects with difficulty to perform psychophysical tests.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Published

2006-01-01

How to Cite

Spatial luminance contrast sensitivity and color discrimination measured with transient visual evoked potential. (2006). Psicologia USP, 17(4), 63-85. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0103-65642006000400004