Abstract

Anatomical and physiological observations in monkeys indicate that the primate visual system consists of several separate and independent subdivisions that analyze different aspects of the same retinal image: cells in cortical visual areas 1 and 2 and higher visual areas are segregated into three interdigitating subdivisions that differ in their selectivity for color, stereopsis, movement, and orientation. The pathways selective for form and color seem to be derived mainly from the parvocellular geniculate subdivisions, the depth- and movement-selective components from the magnocellular. At lower levels, in the retina and in the geniculate, cells in these two subdivisions differ in their color selectivity, contrast sensitivity, temporal properties, and spatial resolution. These major differences in the properties of cells at lower levels in each of the subdivisions led to the prediction that different visual functions, such as color, depth, movement, and form perception, should exhibit corresponding differences. Human perceptual experiments are remarkably consistent with these predictions. Moreover, perceptual experiments can be designed to ask which subdivisions of the system are responsible for particular visual abilities, such as figure/ground discrimination or perception of depth from perspective or relative movement—functions that might be difficult to deduce from single-cell response properties.

Keywords

Parvocellular cellPerceptionContrast (vision)Lateral geniculate nucleusColor visionNeuroscienceVisual perceptionCommunicationRetinaComputer visionBiologyArtificial intelligencePsychologyComputer science

MeSH Terms

AnimalsColor PerceptionDepth PerceptionForm PerceptionHumansMotion PerceptionVisual PathwaysVisual Perception

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Publication Info

Year
1988
Type
review
Volume
240
Issue
4853
Pages
740-749
Citations
3326
Access
Closed

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3326
OpenAlex
116
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2421
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Cite This

Margaret S. Livingstone, David H. Hubel (1988). Segregation of Form, Color, Movement, and Depth: Anatomy, Physiology, and Perception. Science , 240 (4853) , 740-749. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.3283936

Identifiers

DOI
10.1126/science.3283936
PMID
3283936

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%