ADVERTISEMENT

Colour perception restored by sleep

June 10, 2010 03:03 am | Updated 03:03 am IST

Colour perception drifts away from neutrality during wakefulness and is restored during sleep, suggests a research abstract that will be presented yesterday in San Antonio, Texas, at SLEEP 2010, the 24th annual meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies LLC.

Results indicate that prior wakefulness caused the colour grey to be classified as having a slightly but significantly greenish tint. Overnight sleep restored perception to achromatic equilibrium so that grey was perceived as grey.

ADVERTISEMENT

The world around us

ADVERTISEMENT

According to the authors, scientists had not previously investigated how sleep might affect the way we view the world around us.

“This is among the first studies to investigate the effects of sleep on perception,” said principal investigator and lead author Bhavin Sheth, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Houston in Texas.

“Our findings suggest that wakefulness causes colour classification to drift away from neutrality, and sleep restores colour classification to neutral.”

ADVERTISEMENT

The study involved five people who viewed a full-field, homogenous stimulus of either slightly reddish or greenish hue.

The observers had to judge whether the stimulus was greener or redder than their internal perception of neutral grey. Across trials the hue was varied.

One pair of monocular tests was performed just before participants went to sleep, and testing was repeated after participants slept for an average of 7.7 hours, according to a University of Houston press release.

Further testing

Further testing found that overnight, full-field monocular stimulation with a flickering red “ganzfeld” failed to nullify the resetting, sleep-induced effect.

An achromatic stimulus was still less likely to be classified as greenish following sleep, with no statistical difference in the magnitude of the resetting in each eye. According to the authors, this suggests that colour resetting is an internal process that is largely unaffected by external monochromatic visual stimulation.

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT