Dynamic vision sensors (DVS) offer exceptional temporal resolution and dynamic range by asynchronously reporting pixel-level intensity changes. However, conventional DVS rely on a per-pixel independent triggering mechanism, ignoring the spatial integration performed by biological retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). Consequently, they lack the contrast sensitivity function (CSF) and its inherent sensitivity to mid-spatial frequencies, which inevitably leads to information incompleteness due to sub-threshold signal loss. To bridge this gap, we propose FS-DVS (Frequency-Selective Dynamic Vision Sensor), a novel paradigm that integrates a learnable spatial filter strictly preceding the event triggering process to mimic the RGC aggregation mechanism. By developing a differentiable event simulation framework, the spatial filter can be optimized end-to-end with downstream tasks. Our study reveals that starting from a delta function, the learned spatial filters spontaneously evolve into center-surround patterns that emphasize mid-frequency components, consistently aligning with human CSF. Beyond achieving substantial performance gains in object detection and action recognition, the consistent convergence to human-like CSF characteristics across different tasks underscores the universality of this mid-frequency selective mechanism. Compared to naively increasing sensor sensitivity or relying on post-processing, our paradigm achieves selective information enhancement with high noise resilience, providing a robust, biologically plausible blueprint for next-generation neuromorphic sensors.