Literature DB >> 21273380

Contrast summation across eyes and space is revealed along the entire dipper function by a "Swiss cheese" stimulus.

Tim S Meese1, Daniel H Baker.   

Abstract

Previous contrast discrimination experiments have shown that luminance contrast is summed across ocular (T. S. Meese, M. A. Georgeson, & D. H. Baker, 2006) and spatial (T. S. Meese & R. J. Summers, 2007) dimensions at threshold and above. However, is this process sufficiently general to operate across the conjunction of eyes and space? Here we used a "Swiss cheese" stimulus where the blurred "holes" in sine-wave carriers were of equal area to the blurred target ("cheese") regions. The locations of the target regions in the monocular image pairs were interdigitated across eyes such that their binocular sum was a uniform grating. When pedestal contrasts were above threshold, the monocular neural images contained strong evidence that the high-contrast regions in the two eyes did not overlap. Nevertheless, sensitivity to dual contrast increments (i.e., to contrast increments in different locations in the two eyes) was a factor of ∼1.7 greater than to single increments (i.e., increments in a single eye), comparable with conventional binocular summation. This provides evidence for a contiguous area summation process that operates at all contrasts and is influenced little, if at all, by eye of origin. A three-stage model of contrast gain control fitted the results and possessed the properties of ocularity invariance and area invariance owing to its cascade of normalization stages. The implications for a population code for pattern size are discussed.

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Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21273380     DOI: 10.1167/11.1.23

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


  10 in total

1.  Perceived contrast in complex images.

Authors:  Andrew M Haun; Eli Peli
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2013-11-04       Impact factor: 2.240

2.  Paradoxical psychometric functions ("swan functions") are explained by dilution masking in four stimulus dimensions.

Authors:  Daniel H Baker; Tim S Meese; Mark A Georgeson
Journal:  Iperception       Date:  2013-01-02

3.  A common rule for integration and suppression of luminance contrast across eyes, space, time, and pattern.

Authors:  Tim S Meese; Daniel H Baker
Journal:  Iperception       Date:  2013-01-02

4.  A reevaluation of achromatic spatio-temporal vision: Nonoriented filters are monocular, they adapt, and can be used for decision making at high flicker speeds.

Authors:  Tim S Meese; Daniel H Baker
Journal:  Iperception       Date:  2011-06-21

5.  The effect of interocular phase difference on perceived contrast.

Authors:  Daniel H Baker; Stuart A Wallis; Mark A Georgeson; Tim S Meese
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-04-02       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Bilateral gain control; an "innate predisposition" for all sorts of things.

Authors:  Nicholas Wilkinson; Giorgio Metta
Journal:  Front Neurorobot       Date:  2014-02-25       Impact factor: 2.650

7.  Reduced surround suppression in monocular motion perception.

Authors:  Sandra Arranz-Paraíso; Jenny C A Read; Ignacio Serrano-Pedraza
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2021-01-04       Impact factor: 2.240

8.  A psychophysical performance-based approach to the quality assessment of image processing algorithms.

Authors:  Daniel H Baker; Robert J Summers; Alex S Baldwin; Tim S Meese
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-05-05       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Grid-texture mechanisms in human vision: Contrast detection of regular sparse micro-patterns requires specialist templates.

Authors:  Daniel H Baker; Tim S Meese
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-07-27       Impact factor: 4.379

10.  Perception of global image contrast involves transparent spatial filtering and the integration and suppression of local contrasts (not RMS contrast).

Authors:  Tim S Meese; Daniel H Baker; Robert J Summers
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2017-09-06       Impact factor: 2.963

  10 in total

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