| Literature DB >> 11301079 |
S Smith1, C W Clifford, P Wenderoth.
Abstract
This paper examines the interaction between first- and second-order contours in the orientation domain. Using the simultaneous tilt illusion (TI), we show that the apparent rotation of a vertical test grating away from that of a surrounding inducing grating (repulsion effect) occurs when both the inducing and test grating are either first- or second-order. Furthermore, a significant repulsion effect is obtained when a first-order inducing grating surrounds a second-order test. If lateral inhibitory interactions between populations of orientation selective neurons provides a plausible explanation for orientation repulsion effects [Blakemore, C. B. Carpenter, R. H. S. & Georgeson, M. A. (1970) Nature, 228, 37-39], it is likely that the cue-invariant mechanisms that encodes the orientation of first- and second-order contours also exhibit inhibitory interactions. A two-channel computational model of orientation encoding is presented where one channel encodes only first-order stimuli while the second channel encodes both first- and second-order contours. In addition to predicting the orientation repulsion effects we observed, the model also provides a functional account of orientation attraction effects in terms of the responses of populations of orientation-tuned neurons.Mesh:
Year: 2001 PMID: 11301079 DOI: 10.1016/s0042-6989(01)00015-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vision Res ISSN: 0042-6989 Impact factor: 1.886