| Literature DB >> 6533998 |
M E Schneck, R D Hamer, O S Packer, D Y Teller.
Abstract
A fixation-and-flash technique has been developed to provide control over the retinal eccentricities of stimuli presented to infant subjects, to within a few degrees of visual angle. The technique is a variant of forced-choice preferential looking (FPL). An adult observer triggers presentation of the test stimulus when she judges that the infant is fixating a centrally located fixation target. The stimuli are short in relation to the infant's refixation latency. Auxiliary experiments confirmed that on most trials the stimuli fell within +/- 4 degrees of the designated eccentricity. Test fields of two sizes, 3.1 and 17 degrees, were presented to 1-month-old infants at one of four retinal locations, 9, 18, 27 and 36 degrees eccentric. The infants' data show a perfect area-intensity tradeoff at all four locations. Adult control subjects showed summation over areas of only 1-2 degrees. The results are discussed in relation to other evidence of coarse spatial processing in human infants and other immature mammalian systems.Entities:
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Year: 1984 PMID: 6533998 DOI: 10.1016/0042-6989(84)90006-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vision Res ISSN: 0042-6989 Impact factor: 1.886