On 2016 Oct 05, Lydia Maniatis commented:
Thanks for your reply, Peter. I've copied it below and respond to the various points in the order they came up.
You: There are measurements of noise in the visual system of animals which we have cited in the paper, so I can not agree with you that there is no evidence for noise in the visual systems of animals.
Me: I think that all of the cited papers assume they are measuring "noise", without actually testing that assumption.
You: In this paper we are describing the smallest colour difference that chickens were able to discriminate to figure out the equivalent Weber fraction which describe these limits. Whether that is actually caused by noise or not we can not say from our experiment, but it is adressed in some of the cited literature.
Me: The title of your paper says "behavioural thresholds reveal receptor noise" and the abstract states that your "experiments allowed us to compare behavioural results wtih model expectations and determine how different noise types limit colour discrimination." So it sounds like a claim that your experiments did, in fact, corroborate the "noise" assumptions. In fact, the noise argument was never in any danger of falsification, because it was not tested, only assumed to be indirectly measurable. The confusion about this issue has seeped into other publications; the reason I was looking at yours was that Scholtyssek, Osorio and Baddeley (2016) claim that your paper "validated experimentally" the "receptor-noise limited model of Vorobyev and Osorio (1998)." This didn't seem likely, so I wanted to check.
You: We find, similar to other experiments, that there this Weber fraction is the same in relatively brighter light (thresholds are very similar) but that the Weber fraction we need to assume to describe the thresholds needs to be higher in dim light, consistent with addition of photon-shot noise.
Me: "consistent with" doesn't mean causally connected to. If the claim is about causality, this needs to be tested, not assumed. The adjustments and assumptions in general seem ad hoc.
You: Which has been shown to limit visual sensitivity in many experiments.
I think this applies in very, very low light conditions. But your experiment does not constitute a test that this is relevant to your results. Again, it is simply assumed, even though the idea that raw responses of neurons early in the hierarchy are transmitted directly to visual experience is not credible.
You: We are using the Receptor Noise Limited model to describe the data, it is a tool that can be used to make predictions in other scenarios as well.
Me: Why do you consider it a useful tool? Have its "noise" related assumptions ever been tested and corroborated? How? When Vorobyev and Osorio (1998) say that the model "predicted" some psychophysical data, they just mean that they were able to find some datasets that fit more or less, and some that didn't, not that they predicted beforehand which datasets would match. And again, general consistency alone does not justify uncritical acceptance of whatever qualitative assumptions are tacked onto the math.
You: Regarding Percepts: We are not talking about how the animals perceive the colours, but rather how they are able to discriminate them. Absolutely, there is much more in the visual system going on that we yet do not understand. But the photoreceptor cells are the input of the system and the limits of the photoreceptors are going to be important.
Me: First, discrimination implies perception, at least to the extent that two surfaces are perceived as same or different. Second, the limits of photoreceptors are not discernible in ordinary percepts. Correct me if I'm wrong, but you don't even seem to be acknowledging the complexity of the neural code for color, which involves combining cone activity to produce color experiences that can't be qualitatively analyzed on the basis of the individual cone activity, for example the fact that "red" plus "green" plus "blue" cone activity (or, e.g. "red plus green") produces the experience of grey or white. With four cones, the code will be even more complicated.
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