Long-Term Changes in Colour Matching Functions after Exposure to Artificial Sunlight
We have previously reported that relatively short exposures (30 to 60 min) to either sunlight or artificial sunlight are sufficient to shift Rayleigh matches for several hours in the protan direction (1995 Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science36 392). We have subsequently found that this effect cannot be explained by either an alteration in (i) the orientation of photoreceptors, ie no change was found in Stiles — Crawford I before and after adaptation (1995 Perception24 Supplement, 11), or by an alteration in (ii) the density of an observer's macular pigment. In order to distinguish more generally between a change in a pre-receptoral filter and a change in the spectral sensitivity of M or L cones, we are currently obtaining colour matching functions between 570 and 620 nm. Measurements are made before and after 45-min exposure to a white field receiving an illumination of about 40 000 lux from an arc lamp. The mixture primaries are 550 and 690 nm set at 100 td. The stimulus field subtends 2 deg. Matches are made by a temporal substitution method and two staircases are randomly interleaved. The standard wavelengths are randomised.