Multiple Orientation-Contingent Chromatic After-Effects
McCollough's (1965) original demonstration of an orientation-contingent chromatic after-effect (OCCA) used two orthogonal inducing gratings in complementary colours. Fidell (1970) has shown that inducing gratings whose orientations are separated by less than 90° give progressively smaller OCCAs, becoming ineffective below 20° or so. Stromeyer (1969) found that with only a single inducing grating, orthogonal test fields still appeared tinted in complementary hues, and claimed that these hues could be “neutralized” by rotating the inducing grating by 90°. These results raise the question whether (A) the neural representations of orthogonal orientations are coupled with respect to colour in “opponent” fashion, so that red-horizontal has similar effects to green-vertical; or (B) the representations of orientations separated by some minimum angle are chromatically independent, and can develop substantially independent OCCAs. We report the following results which favour hypothesis (B): (1) With a single coloured inducing grating à la Stromeyer (1969), the measured OCCA at right angles shows no signs of “opponent processing”, if the hue of the test grating is compared against that of a plain field rather than an orthogonal grating. (2) With inducing gratings at several orientations, the resultant OCCA has an angular distribution which is the algebraic sum of those for each grating separately. (3) It is possible to associate the same colour with two orientations at right angles without mutual cancellation. (4) Multiple OCCAs show independent time-courses of decay, and can be induced and retained for at least eight orientations at once.