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Evidence that the colored shadow effect is retinal.

B A Weiss, T T Hewett, J R Mentzer

    Perceptual and Motor Skills
    |June 1, 1979
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

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    Colored shadows are perceived due to retinal processing. This visual effect occurs when images are viewed on the same retina, indicating it originates in the eye, not the brain.

    Area of Science:

    • Visual perception
    • Retinal processing
    • Ophthalmology

    Background:

    • The colored shadows effect is a visual phenomenon that has been observed but not fully localized to a specific part of the visual system.
    • Understanding the origin of visual effects is crucial for diagnosing and treating visual processing disorders.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To determine whether the colored shadows effect originates in the retina or the central nervous system.
    • To elucidate the neural locus of the colored shadows phenomenon.

    Main Methods:

    • Utilized polarized lenses to present distinct images of colored shadows to each eye.
    • Controlled viewing conditions to ensure binocular fusion occurred on the same retina.

    Main Results:

    Related Experiment Videos

    • The colored shadows effect was only perceived when the images were presented to the same retina.
    • The phenomenon was not observed when images were presented separately to each eye, even with binocular viewing.

    Conclusions:

    • The colored shadows effect is exclusively a retinal phenomenon.
    • The visual cortex and central nervous system are not involved in the generation of this specific visual effect.