Literature DB >> 9194324

Dynamic shifts of the contrast-response function.

J D Victor1, M M Conte, K P Purpura.   

Abstract

We recorded visual evoked potentials in response to square-wave contrast-reversal checkerboards undergoing a transition in the mean contrast level. Checkerboards were modulated at 4.22 Hz (8.45-Hz reversal rate). After each set of 16 cycles of reversals, stimulus contrast abruptly switched between a "high" contrast level (0.06 to 1.0) to a "low" contrast level (0.03 to 0.5). Higher contrasts attenuated responses to lower contrasts by up to a factor of 2 during the period immediately following the contrast change. Contrast-response functions derived from the initial second following a conditioning contrast shifted by a factor of 2-4 along the contrast axis. For low-contrast stimuli, response phase was an advancing function of the contrast level in the immediately preceding second. For high-contrast stimuli, response phase was independent of the prior contrast history. Steady stimulation for periods as long as 1 min produced only minor effects on response amplitude, and no detectable effects on response phase. These observations delineate the dynamics of a contrast gain control in human vision.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9194324     DOI: 10.1017/s0952523800012232

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vis Neurosci        ISSN: 0952-5238            Impact factor:   3.241


  5 in total

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3.  Element-arrangement textures in multiple objective tasks.

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5.  Adaptation of the steady-state PERG in early glaucoma.

Authors:  Vittorio Porciatti; Brandon Bosse; Prashant K Parekh; Olga A Shif; William J Feuer; Lori M Ventura
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  5 in total

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