Friday, 30 August 2019

vision - Why can cones detect color but rods can't?


I don't know if this question applies to only humans but why can cones see much greater detail than rods? Is it possible to have a rod that can detect light intensity and color?




Answer



The spectral sensitivity of photoreceptors expressed is the key to color vision. See figure below for the sensitivity of three-types of cone cells (S, M, L) and rod cell (R, dashed line). Spectral sensitivity of photoreceptors


From this figure, one can say rod cells provide information about the "blue-greenness" of vision, however, despite their spectral sensitivity, it seems that in human vision rod cells do not contribute to color vision, because they are highly sensitive to intensity, and thus they are mostly saturated in their response (does not induce firing of downstream bipolar cells) during normal daylight conditions. Rod cells specialize for night vision (scotopic conditions) which is crucial for survival, and under this condition the cone cells are pretty much useless.


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