We used color contrast adaptation to examine the chromatic and
contrast selectivity of central color mechanisms. Adaptation to a field
whose color varies along a single axis of color space induces a
selective loss in sensitivity to the adapting axis. The resulting
changes in color appearance are consistent with mechanisms formed by
different linear combinations of the cone signals. We asked whether the
visual system could also adjust to higher-order variations in the
adapting stimulus, by adapting observers to interleaved variations
along both the L versus M and the S versus LM cardinal axes. The
perceived hue of test stimuli was then measured with an asymmetric
matching task. Frequency analysis of the hue shifts revealed weak but
systematic hue rotations away from each cardinal axis and toward the
diagonal intermediate axes. Such shifts could arise if the adapted
channels include mechanisms with narrow chromatic selectivity, as some
physiological recordings suggest, but could also reflect how adaptation
alters the contrast response function. In either case they imply the
presence of more than two mechanisms within the chromatic plane. In a
second set of measurements, we adapted to either the L versus M or the
S versus LM axis alone and tested whether the changes in hue could be
accounted for by changes in relative contrast along the two axes. For
high contrasts the hue biases are larger than the contrast changes
predict. This dissociation implies that the contrast and hue changes
are not carried by a common underlying signal, and could arise if the
contrast along a single color direction is encoded by more than one
mechanism with different contrast sensitivities or if different subsets
of channels encode contrast and hue. Such variations in contrast
sensitivity are also consistent with physiological recordings of
cortical neurons.