Literature DB >> 17134997

Spatial and temporal dependencies of cross-orientation suppression in human vision.

Tim S Meese1, David J Holmes.   

Abstract

A well-known property of orientation-tuned neurons in the visual cortex is that they are suppressed by the superposition of an orthogonal mask. This phenomenon has been explained in terms of physiological constraints (synaptic depression), engineering solutions for components with poor dynamic range (contrast normalization) and fundamental coding strategies for natural images (redundancy reduction). A common but often tacit assumption is that the suppressive process is equally potent at different spatial and temporal scales of analysis. To determine whether it is so, we measured psychophysical cross-orientation masking (XOM) functions for flickering horizontal Gabor stimuli over wide ranges of spatio-temporal frequency and contrast. We found that orthogonal masks raised contrast detection thresholds substantially at low spatial frequencies and high temporal frequencies (high speeds), and that small and unexpected levels of facilitation were evident elsewhere. The data were well fit by a functional model of contrast gain control, where (i) the weight of suppression increased with the ratio of temporal to spatial frequency and (ii) the weight of facilitatory modulation was the same for all conditions, but outcompeted by suppression at higher contrasts. These results (i) provide new constraints for models of primary visual cortex, (ii) associate XOM and facilitation with the transient magno- and sustained parvostreams, respectively, and (iii) reconcile earlier conflicting psychophysical reports on XOM.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17134997      PMCID: PMC1679878          DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2006.3697

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8452            Impact factor:   5.349


  78 in total

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4.  Spatial organization and magnitude of orientation contrast interactions in primate V1.

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7.  Suppression without inhibition in visual cortex.

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10.  Coding of the contrasts in natural images by populations of neurons in primary visual cortex (V1).

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  18 in total

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Review 3.  Lateral effects in pattern vision.

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5.  Steady-state contrast response functions provide a sensitive and objective index of amblyopic deficits.

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6.  Orientation bandwidths are invariant across spatiotemporal frequency after isotropic components are removed.

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7.  Release from cross-orientation suppression facilitates 3D shape perception.

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8.  The role of feedback in visual masking and visual processing.

Authors:  Stephen L Macknik; Susana Martinez-Conde
Journal:  Adv Cogn Psychol       Date:  2008-07-15

9.  Temporal whitening: transient noise perceptually equalizes the 1/f temporal amplitude spectrum.

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Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2009-09-16       Impact factor: 2.240

10.  Selectivity as well as sensitivity loss characterizes the cortical spatial frequency deficit in amblyopia.

Authors:  Robert F Hess; Xingfeng Li; Behzad Mansouri; Benjamin Thompson; Bruce C Hansen
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