Literature DB >> 18484829

Time-course and surround modulation of contrast masking in human vision.

Toni P Saarela1, Michael H Herzog.   

Abstract

Neural and perceptual responses to a visual stimulus can be suppressed by the addition of both spatially overlapping and spatially adjacent contextual stimuli. We investigated the temporal characteristics of these suppressive interactions in psychophysical contrast masking experiments using Gabor and grating stimuli with a spatial frequency of 4 cycles per degree. We found that the time course of masking strongly depended on mask orientation. Most interestingly, masking by a spatially overlaid, iso-oriented mask was strongest when the target was presented immediately before or immediately after the mask. This masking was transient, presumably caused by the neural responses to mask onset and offset. Adding a surround to the mask modulated the backward masking effect, but only when the target and the central mask were iso-oriented. Our results provide evidence for a surround suppression mechanism that affected the transient responses to the mask onset, but not the responses to the mask offset. Together, these results demonstrate how the effects of spatial context in visual processing critically depend on stimulus timing.

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Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18484829     DOI: 10.1167/8.3.23

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vis        ISSN: 1534-7362            Impact factor:   2.240


  9 in total

1.  Different orientation tuning of near- and far-surround suppression in macaque primary visual cortex mirrors their tuning in human perception.

Authors:  S Shushruth; Lauri Nurminen; Maryam Bijanzadeh; Jennifer M Ichida; Simo Vanni; Alessandra Angelucci
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2013-01-02       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  The impact of preceding noise on the frequency tuning of rat auditory cortex neurons.

Authors:  Yinting Peng; Pengpeng Xing; Juan He; Xinde Sun; Jiping Zhang
Journal:  BMC Neurosci       Date:  2012-06-18       Impact factor: 3.288

3.  Effects of mean luminance changes on human contrast perception: contrast dependence, time-course and spatial specificity.

Authors:  Markku Kilpeläinen; Lauri Nurminen; Kristian Donner
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-02-15       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Masking of figure-ground texture and single targets by surround inhibition: a computational spiking model.

Authors:  Hans Supèr; August Romeo
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-02-29       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Temporal integration of movement: the time-course of motion streaks revealed by masking.

Authors:  David Alais; Deborah Apthorp; Anna Karmann; John Cass
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-12-20       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 6.  Why vision is not both hierarchical and feedforward.

Authors:  Michael H Herzog; Aaron M Clarke
Journal:  Front Comput Neurosci       Date:  2014-10-22       Impact factor: 2.380

7.  Differences in perceptual masking between humans and rats.

Authors:  Katrina L Dell; Ehsan Arabzadeh; Nicholas S C Price
Journal:  Brain Behav       Date:  2019-08-24       Impact factor: 2.708

8.  Global and high-level effects in crowding cannot be predicted by either high-dimensional pooling or target cueing.

Authors:  Alban Bornet; Oh-Hyeon Choung; Adrien Doerig; David Whitney; Michael H Herzog; Mauro Manassi
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2021-11-01       Impact factor: 2.240

Review 9.  The Irreducibility of Vision: Gestalt, Crowding and the Fundamentals of Vision.

Authors:  Michael H Herzog
Journal:  Vision (Basel)       Date:  2022-06-15
  9 in total

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