Colour centre
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The colour centre is a region in the human brain responsible for processing colour. It consists of two subdivisions, an anterior one, called V4α and a posterior one, called V4. The structural organization of the colour centre was analysed using fMRI.
The term colour centre can also refer to an anionic vacancy in a crystal filled by one or more electrons, usually called an F-Centre.
[edit] References
- Bartels, A. & S. Zeki (2000). The architecture of the colour centre in the human visual brain: new results and a review. European Journal of Neuroscience 12 (1): 172-193.
- C. J. Lueck, S. Zeki, K. J. Friston, M.-P. Deiber, P. Cope, V. J. Cunningham, A. A. Lammertsma, C. Kennard, R. S. J. Frackowiak (1989). The colour centre in the cerebral cortex of man. Nature 340: 386-389.